| Basics of Cisco Switch Administration - Part 2 |
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| Written by David Noel-Davies | |||||||
| Thursday, 02 August 2007 | |||||||
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In Basics of Cisco Switch Administration - Part 1, we covered some of the basics of Cisco switch administration – how to log in, how to show configuration, how to change interface speed & duplex, how to enable switch ports, and how to show switch port status. In Part 2, we will stick to the basics of switch administration by covering how to save your configuration, how to use the Cisco Network Assistant, how to speed up switch port startup, and basic VLAN commands. How to save your switch configurationIn Part 1 of this series, we talked about how to enable/disable ports and how to change speed & duplex settings. Those are necessary administrator functions but, when you are done, you must save your configuration. Cisco switches will not automatically save your changes. If you make these changes and the switch looses power, those changes are gone. You must save your changes when you are done. The minimum that is required is to save your changes to the local switch NVRAM. There are two ways to do this, let me demonstrate: The textbook method of savings your configuration is: Switch# copy running-config startup-config How to use the Cisco Network AssistantThe Cisco Network Assistant (CNA) is a free graphics tool included when you purchase a new switch. It is used to administer Cisco network devices. CNA is a feature-rich tool and I cannot possibly go into everything it can do in this short article. I recommend CNA to anyone who would like a graphical interface for their Cisco network devices. How to speed up switch port startupSwitch ports could be connected to a variety of devices – other switches, routers, trunk ports, PC’s, or VoIP phones. Each of these devices has a different configuration. Sometimes, when a device is connected to a switch port, the switch will attempt to negotiate settings to match this device. This takes time and it will delay the ability of your device (such as a PC) to transmit and receive data from the network. Basic VLAN commandsMost companies today use Virtual LANs (VLANs). As an administrator, you should know how to 1) see what device is on what VLAN and 2) to change the VLAN that a device is in. As you know, if your device is in the wrong VLAN, it won’t be able to communicate with the servers that it needs to talk to and/or it may be on the wrong IP subnet.
As you can see, this command shows you what VLANs exist on this switch, and what switch ports are in what VLAN. Article SummaryHere is what we have learned:
For more information on switch configuration, see the Cisco Cataylst 2950 switch administration guide.
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