If you need more 'inside help' with Cisco products - my $WORK is Cisco. I can't release internal code (career limiting move!), but I can ask senior internal engineers about issues and possibly get answers for difficult-to-answer questions.
I'm in IT - I don't sell product, I support some of the people who do. :-)
- Richard, VE7CVS
On 12/26/15 3:46 PM, Elias Basse wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Ip ip tunnel on cisco is fairly straitforward. If you know your host address spaces on both sides, I suggest you build an access control list to limit flooding and scanning as well as groom the routing table for the appropriate tunnel routes.
Example: Ip route 44.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 tunnel0 Ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 loopback0 (prevents internet access by black holing requests to loopback) unless you want internet access for clients.
I suggest using an open source content filter such as pfsense or the like to prevent things like https as encryption is a bad idea if laws prohibit as well as prevent access to everything but an approved white list of sites.
Also cisco can do ax25 over ip as well and can connect to a modem if you have a spare serial interface.
That's what we do here in LA.
Let me know if you need an ios update as I work for an all cisco gold partner and may have it already.
Best Regards,
Elias Basse KD5JFE Louisiana AMPRNET ip coordinator. (Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Protocol 4 is what you want and turn any Cisco unique features off.
Sent from my handheld computer
On Dec 26, 2015, at 1:22 PM, Drorap drorap@netvision.net.il wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Hi there I have started to config a Cisco rouer to serve as a gateway for the
AMPRNET
I put in the command the following lines
interface Tunnel0 ip unnumbered Ethernet0 no ip directed-broadcast tunnel source Ethernet0 tunnel destination 132.239.255.131 tunnel mode ipip
My question is: Is the IPIP is ame as the AMPRNET do ? (i remember
changing the PID from 4 to 94 (or mabe opposite) ) so is the PID of the Router same as what we use now ? (and can someone remind me what we use today?)
and is there any command that allow me to change the PID if the
default isnt what we use ?
If needed the IOS is version 12 Please advice Thanks Forward Ronen - 4Z4ZQ http://www.ronen.org
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