- Follow Mr Bart on WordPress.com
Most popular
Topics
- Cisco (50)
- Linux (2)
- Miscellaneous (11)
- Raspberry (3)
- Testing (7)
- Windows 11 Tricks (3)
-
Recent Posts
- Connecting ESP8266 WiFi Development Board NodeMCU CH340G ESP-12E to Arduino IDE October 28th, 2023 (Saturday)
- Gazebo – ROS basics – creating the first simple robot January 19th, 2023 (Thursday)
- Preparing to run Linux software directly on Windows 11 December 30th, 2022 (Friday)
- Tweaking Windows 11 taskbar (regedit tinkering !) December 29th, 2022 (Thursday)
- English language in the Xbox App (Windows 11) December 25th, 2022 (Sunday)
- Spotify privacy tweaks September 6th, 2020 (Sunday)
- Instalation of GePhi on Windows 10 May 31st, 2020 (Sunday)
Archives
- October 2023 (1)
- January 2023 (1)
- December 2022 (3)
- September 2020 (1)
- May 2020 (1)
- December 2015 (1)
- October 2015 (1)
- September 2015 (1)
- August 2015 (1)
- June 2015 (2)
- March 2015 (3)
- February 2015 (4)
- January 2015 (4)
- December 2014 (4)
- November 2014 (5)
- October 2014 (4)
- September 2014 (4)
- August 2014 (3)
- July 2014 (5)
- June 2014 (6)
- May 2014 (5)
- April 2014 (4)
- March 2014 (4)
- February 2014 (5)
- January 2014 (1)
Monthly Archives: March 2014
Etherchannel
The Etherchannel as a concept is an easy one to grasp. It is a way to boost a connection speed between two network devices by use of more than a single cable between devices. In other words, it is stretching … Continue reading
Spanning Tree Protocol Configuration
Setting bridge priority
Posted in Cisco
Tagged BPDU, BPDU filter, bpdufilter, bpduguard, Bridge ID, CCNA, Designated Port, errdisable, flapping interface, Forward Delay, Hello Timer, link cost, Max Age Timer, multilayer lan design, portfast, redundant network design, root bridge, root cost, Root Port, Spannin Tree Protocol, STP, STP priority, switch priority
Leave a comment
Spanning Tree Protocol
A few obvious questions: What is the STP ? Why do you need one ? Could you rather do with out it ?
VLAN configuration
On the date 2014/12/05 I have replaced this article with it’s improved version VLAN domain configuration on the GNS
Posted in Cisco
Tagged allowed VLANs, CCENT, CCNA, dot1q, DTP, IEEE 802.1Q, ISL, MD5 digest, prunning, reset VTP revision, trunk, VLAN, VLAN mismatch, VLAN Replication Protocol, VTP, VTP domains, VTP encapsulation, VTP name, VTP password
Leave a comment