So who said that Cisco Network engineering courses had to cost thousands.

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Commsupport Network is the original and still the only Network engineering company run by network engineers with courses taught by network engineers.

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So apart from our fantastically low prices why consider training with us

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Our courses focus on the really important practical engineering knowledge you'll need in the real world. The knowledge that'll stand you out from the crowd.

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Classroom based & Live On-Line Classes

Sign up for today to a Classroom based CCNA course with Commsupport and you can join in our live twice weekly on-line webinar classes Live on-line revision sessions

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Free Course Re-take Until you Pass

We offer the only unlimited free course retake policy in the industry, you can retake your course until you pass free of charge.

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Comprehensive Hands-on Labs

We make sure that our our Hands-on labs are laid out to assist you in understanding exactly what you are doing every step of the way. Download a copy of one of our CCNA classroom lab workbooks our hands-on labs are the only labs in the industry which will guide you through the everyday common configurations you will encounter in the real world an in the exams

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Great Practical Hands-on Lab work and our Break/Fix™ sessions

We take pride that on every course we run we are teaching you network engineering, making sure we do this by having the most comprehensive and detailed hands-on labs exercises in the U.K, also we are the only school to use the Break/Fix™ training methodology, you build it we break it,you fix it!

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Industry Innovators

Everyday we make sure that we improve our offering from making all of our own CCNA and CCNA Voice videos to now offering our students Live on-line webinar sessions courses.

 

You never stop learning, we never stop innovating. Learn why we believe it is important to us to lead the market

 

We are so confident of what we can do for you that we offer our free one day introductory networking courses. Come and sit with us and see for yourself and learn something new along the way too. Click here for more details of the free one day course

 

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CCNA House keeping commands

Logging Synchronous Command.

For our students coming into Cisco networking for the first time they are always surprised by a few of the default command settings that are present on the Cisco switches and routers.

These default command settings are a real draw back if left at the default settings so unless the student changes the default settings then the CCNA student is generally going to become increasingly frustrated.

At Commsupport we continually practice the procedure of instructing our CCNA students (and sometimes our CCNP students) that they must change the default settings in order to make their programming via the command line a lot more fluid and without interruption.

The first of our house keeping commands is the “Logging Synchronous” command.

The no logging synchronous command is enabled by default. The purpose of this command is to so that when events occur on your Cisco device these events are reported to the administrators console but unfortunately the messages do by default interrupt the typing and can make life difficult for the administrator to type in command fluidly.

To prevent the console from reporting device events directly to the users console screen you can if you wish completely disable the logging to the console. To disable any logging to the console issue the following command in the global configuration mode:

Router(config)#logging console

If you do decide to disable all logging messages to the console you will lose all visibility of the any events that are occurring on the device, such events may be interfaces enabling or disabling, routing protocols losing or gaining neighbors, or interface duplex mismatches, all of these events are important to you the network administrator.

So that you may retain visibility of events that occur on the device you may wish to log the events to a syslog server on a machine that your device knows of. To turn on syslog on the Cisco device, follow these commads:

Router(config)#logging x.x.x.x

Note: x.x.x.x is the ip address of the P.C with the logging software.

To prevent device events from interrupting your typing but no to prevent the events from being issued onto the console screen you will enter the following command under the line Console prompt, also whilst we are in the line console setting we will also instruct the console that it must never time-out the session even if see that there is no activity i.e. typing commands, this command is the “exec-timeout 0 0”. The two zeros represent minutes and seconds respectively. By setting the values to “0 0” we have instructed the console never to time out

Router(conf)# line console 0

Router(config-line)#no logging synchronous

Router(config-line)#exec-time 0 0

Now when events occur on the Cisco router or switch those very same messages which interrupted your typing will still be displayed onto the console screen but now what ever command you were typing in will simply be dropped down to the next available prompt and no longer chopped in half.

 

 

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