I genuinely appreciate Keith, Chuck, and Jeremy. This is my second time reviewing CCNA now, first time was a cohort, which was amazing but I was as green as it gets so it was a struggle for me, especially at age 38 (then), heck, I didn't even know what a "ping" was. I was always a lover of tech and was a true nerd also but I spent most of my time as an infantryman in the Army. I finally was discharged and wanted to be a network guy so I went to school for it, finished the cohort but failed my CCNA. I ended up taking a help desk job and eventually landing a darn good gig, life was good and then I lost my job so I have now decided to try for my CCNA again and this time, watching the videos and taking out a monthly subscription to CBT Nugs it all makes much more sense. I'm grateful to receive this knowledge. Thanks
@chrisdolan your story of life the same as mine so I also appreciate Keith, Chuck, Jeremy and David Bombal. I was also spent most of my time working as a military and came across with networking stuffs and you know that's so amazing... Just keeping forward no matter... Peace for everyone
Your lessons are a blessing, I haven't found a singel teacher which illustrates as well as you. The fact that you draw as you lecture helps alot! You're also so goofy and cool! Keep up the great work!
Another reason you might want to do tag (trunk) is for scalability. For example, if you want to pass VLAN traffic between the switches without tagging (trunking), you would have to run the physical cable between switches for each VLAN. For example, if you have 10 VLANs, you would end up running 10 physical cables. With trunking an interface on a switch, you can achieve the same goal with just one physical link because it will tag a VLAN id before sending a frame with appropriate VLAN id so the receiving switch knows that which VLAN a frame belongs to. In future, if you introduce more VLANs in your network, you can simply just create VLANs in switches and trunk it without any physical work.
I'm speaking it into the youtube-verse now. I told my girlfriend my plan and now i'm telling....all of you :) I have spent waaayyyy too long trying to "study" for the CCNA. I just don't ever feel ready enough and taking the Alphaprep always sets me back because it makes me think I don't know anything. I went through Neil Anderson's courses and labs about 2x by now but it's always spaced out the time that I dedicate to study. So I am declaring that once I make my way through Keith's AMAZING CCNA Master Playlist and labs, I'll go through Neil's labs again and then I will take the exam...it's now or never :') Thank you for all your help and motivation Keith. Very inspirational!
"I have spent waaayyyy too long trying to "study" for the CCNA"...I totally get you. Since I recently got RIF'd, it's time for me to re-address that discrepancy. How's your journey been since your post??
Hats off to your use of the plastic cups to illustrate encapsulation.That is such a neat idea. You are an incredible teacher.. said that before. I just need to come back and learn real wire level networking from you. Something I had avoided all these year, but now have found your courses. Thank you.
Bless your existence, work, skill levels and teacher mentality. You are single-handedly not only helping me learn for my university exams but also actually made me interested again in a subject that university presented it so badly it made me resent it, while now i consider getting a certificate in possibly in the future. Thank you from the bottom of my heart ❤
I am loving loving these fine explanations on CCNA Topics. I am trying to obtain my CCNA Yes, I am old also at 40 doing this. I should have a long time ago but, non the less here I AM. Hahaha. Thank you all for taking the time to give us a chance at trying to learn in such a visual way and using real life to describe what's happening with everything.
Hi Keith Thanks a lot for all your videos, I literally watch each episode before getting outta bed and I go right into my textbook with a warm coffee.. u definitely make this so easy for me to understand!! I’m preparing my brains for the 301 exam.. Thanks a lot and may God continue to give those brains of yours outstanding knowledge
i witch i can add more like tnx kieth to find these content for free is not that easy the playlist all is good i recommend it to anyone who preparing for ccna better than anything else on youtube 40 min worth to watch
best and most effective trunking explanation I have seen. Sometimes I've wondered is CCNA is this hard ? will I be able to do it??. But after watching your videos I'm confident I can get my CCNA. Thanks Keith.😀
Supplementing my CBTNuggets CCNA 200-301 VLAN Section studies by watching this very specific video. Whenever i'm not 100% clear i jump over a supplement it with one your specific videos and then jump back.
Hello Mr. Keith. I greatly appreciate the time you've taken to share your knowledge and expertise to us. Great t-shirt! I will have that design printed. =D
Keith you are awesome man! Excellent delivery for us visual learners, you remind me of me lol when explaining things and I love your enthusiasm. Thanks again and hello from Calgary!
Honestly you are the best! Before i would force myself to study networking but now i love it and enjot it !!! wish u all the best :) stay safe and healthy :)
Hey Keith, have you ever created a videos tutorial on how to setup your labs? As a trainer myself I’m keen to see how you setup your topologies, I see use of VMs, wireshark captures, packet tracer and use of MTputty to configure switches etc. I’d love to see your setup for these tutorials to see how I can improve mine to help enhance my hands on skills....
Keith, thank you very much, this 802.1Q Ethernet Trunking topic, just understandable and clear after your explanation, just a pleasure to learn so for the CCNA exem.
I not only enjoyed this video, I actually learned a lot which was the most important thing. I watched this specifically to supplement learning VLAN Trunking and I learned enough to say I understand. The Cup Props was AMAZING to convey the actuality of things. The only thing you did not show was an actual physical demonstration of how the switches are connected in a Trunk Switch to Switch. But i get the idea now. I was always confused as to why there was two physical cables connected for the Trunking. I think it dawned on me finally when you did "show Interface trunk" and in the last section info i think i understood now that STP is actually working on one the loop connections. If i'm incorrect please let me know. Too bad i didn't get CBTN validation credits for watching 42 mins of this video.
Thank you. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord Thanks again!
Hi Keith and thank you so much for your work here! I'm eager to pull this certification in so i can stop farming it out to others and provide better service. I'm 55, self taught on most things but this topic needs a great instructor and you are it. On this video, why 2 trunks?
Thank you for the question Mike. Usually, if we are using more than 1 physical link between switches, it is for either fault tolerance (in case one fails), more throughput (if we use EtherChannel (separate video), or both! Hope that helps. Enjoy the whole CCNA playlist here: ogit.online/sloth New videos added to that playlist each week. Thanks again Mike, glad you are here!
Hi, Keith so far I am really enjoying your video thank you so much, Can you also please create a video where you actually type this command, and tools do you, please suggest how to practice on our own what type of question we should create while doing any of the commands.
Very Nice work. But I'm wondering, in your example, vlan 10 and vlan 20 are on different physical switches and you use a trunk between them. But would you use a trunk if vlan 10 and vlan 20 were on the same physical switch?
As a side note. We really should set the switchport mode on all ports, especially the ones, we don't want to use as trunk ports. Otherwise an attacker, could connect to a port, and have switch set it self to trunk. And have access to all VLANS.
Thank you Arijit Das! That OSPF network types happens on 1/1/2020. Will also add the recording of that live stream to the CCNA Playlist on RUclips here: ogit.online/sloth Thanks!
Hey Keith, Thanks for your videos 😊 I have a question, do we always need to have two interfaces on each switch to configure trunking? Can't we configure trunking with just one interface on each side?
Thank you aklilu abay! Yes, this is definitely in the 2.2.b section of the new 200-301 blueprint! I made a playlist, that gets updated weekly. Catch the videos in order using the playlist here: ogit.online/sloth Thanks for the comments!
Excellent Video! I have a Question: How do I and from where do I memorize all the commands ? and How do I know what I get/obtain for a particular command ? I know it comes from practice but from where do I get and memorize all the commands? Hope Keith or anyone could answer my question! Thanks once again for explaining so well Keith! You really are a Networking Rockstar! :)
Thank you Khasim Shareef. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord Thanks again Khasim Shareef!
@@KeithBarker Hello Keith! Thanks a lot for your reply! I will most definitely join the discord server so I could ask you questions on topics I am studying and also could discuss things with others too. Thank you very much once again, Keith! Kind Regards, Khasim
Keith, when you say "Don't count on it happening dynamically', it sounds like that is a possibility but the best practice is to designate trunk ports specifically, yes?
Wonderful vid Keith, much appreciated. Any reason why you used 2 switch ports on each side as trunk ports? Are there any rules on how many is needed? Thanks!
I found this from another comment, "Usually, if we are using more than 1 physical link between switches, it is for either fault tolerance (in case one fails), more throughput (if we use EtherChannel (separate video), or both! Hope that helps."
Thank you Adil Akhmetov. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord Thanks again Adil Akhmetov!
Random Trivia... In ALL my years working with computers in general, I don't recall ever even thinking to ask what PING stood for.. I assumed it was a sonar reply, which it also is..... Thanks!
I never know if I'm studying what I need to know for the exam. Ive taken a couple free practice exams and it seems those questions are stuff I've never covered. Is this normal or am I just freaking out?
Thank you Dwayne, I hear you. The safest thing to do is look at the blueprint, and see whether or not you feel you can meet the requirements listed there. This video walks through the blueprint, starting at about the 28 minute mark: ruclips.net/video/pqvhNrsl1Kc/видео.html Happy studies
I love learning about the trunking protocols. I picked up on them quickly but I always feel like I can learn more and dig deeper. What's a good source, besides this one, that takes a deeper look at 802.1q trunking?
very clear and understandable breakdown of trunking. alot of thanks sir for making it easier for me. and the music in the background I love it, would love to know the title and the artist so that i can download for myself ❤️👌
You say there's no interest in ROAS ? Apparently I'm in the minority. I was fascinated implementing it in a PTSA Final for CCNAv7 SRWE. I'd be interested to hear/see you break it down, for a better understanding. Thanks a lot for all your great content and great attitude
At 15:18, when the pc receives frame it decapsulate the frame from layer1 to 7. As it through, it has to see data link layer first, then it will see the 802.1Q tag but you said opposite to it.
In addition to talk about STP,are you going to talk about RSTP and the other versions of STP? I would really like to learn about the differences between the STP's out there aswell.
Thank you anders gjerløw! In the first one, I intend to address the basics, (election, root ports, designated ports), and then will follow up with more about RSTP and MST at a later date. I appreciate your input, thoughts, and participation.
Keith, in every videos there is an example given when pc1 tries to communicate with pc2. I just wanted to know at what point pc1 tries to communicate with pc2(real time ). Only when pinging? Sorry am a learner.
Thank you Kani Mozhi. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord Thanks again Kani Mozhi!
Hey Keith. Say in a scenario where it’s a PTP trunk link with a repeater Switch in the middle due to non line of sight. When you setup a LAG 1 between a main and redundant link and you need to setup a LAG 2 group that essentially for the repeater side, is there anything to keep in mind or will the packets just flow through load balanced path?
Great question. Much of that will depend on the type/function of that repeater switch. You may need to use QinQ tunneling if that repeater switch tries to think to much outside of keeping the individual connections/links isolated. Here is a resource for more on QinQ: www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/routers/access/ISRG2/software/feature/guide/QinQ_L2PT.html Hope that helps, and thanks for the question.
Thank you for the question Jerry Ebanks! Glad you are here. I use OBS (open source free software) for the streaming. It has 2 scenes set up. One is a section of my monitor, and the other is my web camera. I use an Elgato "Stream Deck" to switch between them. Hope that helps, and thanks for your participation and your question.
Thank you Eduuu. I rotate the music, so I am not sure which song that was. I use a service from www.epidemicsound.com/ and have several that I pull from. Thanks for the question, and enjoy the whole CCNA playlist ogit.online/sloth
I can appreciate the Wire Shark 'realo-world' capture, , which lacks in the netacad 'theory' material and Packet tracers. No mention of the VLAN tag fields, VLAN numeric ranges, and DTP? I mention this because a quick glance at the other 70+ videos in you MasterPlaylist I don't see them come up.. Im reviewing all of my notes from netacad, , trying to prepare for all the little things Cisco tries to fail people on.
Yes, the interface range command in Cisco IOS refers to performing a configuration for two or more ports or interfaces in the same switch, rather than doing it one by one.
Thank you for the question Addy! The benefit of 2, is for fault tolerance, in the event 1 of the links or interfaces fails, the other can keep going. One other (and better option) when using 2 links, is to configure them as an EtherChannel group, and that allow fault tolerance (in case 1 link or interface fails) and while they are both up, there is added bandwidth available. Thanks for watching, and for the question. Happy studies 😀
I genuinely appreciate Keith, Chuck, and Jeremy. This is my second time reviewing CCNA now, first time was a cohort, which was amazing but I was as green as it gets so it was a struggle for me, especially at age 38 (then), heck, I didn't even know what a "ping" was. I was always a lover of tech and was a true nerd also but I spent most of my time as an infantryman in the Army. I finally was discharged and wanted to be a network guy so I went to school for it, finished the cohort but failed my CCNA. I ended up taking a help desk job and eventually landing a darn good gig, life was good and then I lost my job so I have now decided to try for my CCNA again and this time, watching the videos and taking out a monthly subscription to CBT Nugs it all makes much more sense. I'm grateful to receive this knowledge. Thanks
Way to commit to your goal Chris Dolan❗ You can do this.
@chrisdolan your story of life the same as mine so I also appreciate Keith, Chuck, Jeremy and David Bombal. I was also spent most of my time working as a military and came across with networking stuffs and you know that's so amazing... Just keeping forward no matter... Peace for everyone
The cups were an awesome illustration
Thank you Feron Rolle! Glad you are here.
Yes, they were amazing but... Keith you forgot the trailer of L2 to make a full illustration. Anyways, well done!
great teacher
Your lessons are a blessing, I haven't found a singel teacher which illustrates as well as you. The fact that you draw as you lecture helps alot! You're also so goofy and cool! Keep up the great work!
Wow, thank you!
Another reason you might want to do tag (trunk) is for scalability. For example, if you want to pass VLAN traffic between the switches without tagging (trunking), you would have to run the physical cable between switches for each VLAN. For example, if you have 10 VLANs, you would end up running 10 physical cables. With trunking an interface on a switch, you can achieve the same goal with just one physical link because it will tag a VLAN id before sending a frame with appropriate VLAN id so the receiving switch knows that which VLAN a frame belongs to.
In future, if you introduce more VLANs in your network, you can simply just create VLANs in switches and trunk it without any physical work.
I'm speaking it into the youtube-verse now. I told my girlfriend my plan and now i'm telling....all of you :) I have spent waaayyyy too long trying to "study" for the CCNA. I just don't ever feel ready enough and taking the Alphaprep always sets me back because it makes me think I don't know anything. I went through Neil Anderson's courses and labs about 2x by now but it's always spaced out the time that I dedicate to study. So I am declaring that once I make my way through Keith's AMAZING CCNA Master Playlist and labs, I'll go through Neil's labs again and then I will take the exam...it's now or never :') Thank you for all your help and motivation Keith. Very inspirational!
did you take the exam now?
"I have spent waaayyyy too long trying to "study" for the CCNA"...I totally get you. Since I recently got RIF'd, it's time for me to re-address that discrepancy. How's your journey been since your post??
So, when you knocked over the cups at about the 15 minute mark... was that a dropped packet? 🤣
Thank you Jason! lol
What a blessing to find such a good teacher sharing knowledge for free better than some paid teacher
Wow, thank you!
Hats off to your use of the plastic cups to illustrate encapsulation.That is such a neat idea. You are an incredible teacher.. said that before. I just need to come back and learn real wire level networking from you. Something I had avoided all these year, but now have found your courses. Thank you.
Thank you! Cheers!
Bless your existence, work, skill levels and teacher mentality. You are single-handedly not only helping me learn for my university exams but also actually made me interested again in a subject that university presented it so badly it made me resent it, while now i consider getting a certificate in possibly in the future.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart ❤
I’m impressed by keith’s quality of teaching. I’m definitely passing the CCNA. Thanks keith!
Keith, your positive vibe is infectious,, Thanks for all your unselfish work, Ready to Rock you CCNA : )
Rock on!
I am loving loving these fine explanations on CCNA Topics. I am trying to obtain my CCNA Yes, I am old also at 40 doing this. I should have a long time ago but, non the less here I AM. Hahaha. Thank you all for taking the time to give us a chance at trying to learn in such a visual way and using real life to describe what's happening with everything.
Thank you @dianemennig6058! You can do this!
Your videos have been the final piece of the puzzle for a lot of the topics I've been self-studying. Thank you , you are awesome , that is all.
Glad I could help!
Hi Keith
Thanks a lot for all your videos, I literally watch each episode before getting outta bed and I go right into my textbook with a warm coffee.. u definitely make this so easy for me to
understand!!
I’m preparing my brains for the 301 exam..
Thanks a lot and may God continue to give those brains of yours outstanding knowledge
Fantastic!
As always thank you very much for these fantastic tutorials. For the first time I seriously begin to understsand the scene behind 802.1q.
Glad I could help!
i witch i can add more like tnx kieth to find these content for free is not that easy the playlist all is good i recommend it to anyone who preparing for ccna better than anything else on youtube 40 min worth to watch
Thank you noufal kerdoud!
best and most effective trunking explanation I have seen. Sometimes I've wondered is CCNA is this hard ? will I be able to do it??. But after watching your videos I'm confident I can get my CCNA. Thanks Keith.😀
this community of learners is so lucky to have you .. thank you for evrything
Supplementing my CBTNuggets CCNA 200-301 VLAN Section studies by watching this very specific video. Whenever i'm not 100% clear i jump over a supplement it with one your specific videos and then jump back.
Awesome! Great way to do it!
the way you teach makes me at elementary class dramatic method teaching , really I am attending with interest , tanx K.B
Thank you aklilu abay! I appreciate your kind words. Glad the training is useful! See you in another video or live stream soon.
Hello Mr. Keith. I greatly appreciate the time you've taken to share your knowledge and expertise to us. Great t-shirt! I will have that design printed. =D
Awesome, thank you!
Keith you are awesome man! Excellent delivery for us visual learners, you remind me of me lol when explaining things and I love your enthusiasm. Thanks again and hello from Calgary!
Awesome, thank you!
Sir, thank you so much for all of your videos. They help me A LOT. I am so addicted to watching your videos.
So nice of you
Mwalimu Keith, I learned something new today. The cups bring to life some of these complicated concepts. Thank you
Thank you Joseph.
Honestly you are the best! Before i would force myself to study networking but now i love it and enjot it !!! wish u all the best :) stay safe and healthy :)
Thank you Nilufar Yusupova!
Excellent presentation of details. Good job Keith!!
Happy to do it, thanks for the feedback Venkat P.
Master of Networking our Keith has lived decades in it. Keith's mind works way faster than a Giant Router with zero error ;) Lots of love
Thank you Gulab!
Hey Keith, have you ever created a videos tutorial on how to setup your labs? As a trainer myself I’m keen to see how you setup your topologies, I see use of VMs, wireshark captures, packet tracer and use of MTputty to configure switches etc. I’d love to see your setup for these tutorials to see how I can improve mine to help enhance my hands on skills....
I have followed a lot of content on ccna/ccnp, this is a cut above the rest. thank you
Wow, thank you!
@Keith. Thanks. Your method of teaching is excellent. Keep it up...
Thanks, will do!
Man I've learned more from you than any networking book I've ever read
Thank you Shanebagel
Glad you are here to teach us Keith...
Happy to do it, thanks for the feedback Irfan.
Keith, thank you very much, this 802.1Q Ethernet Trunking topic, just understandable and clear after your explanation, just a pleasure to learn so for the CCNA exem.
Happy to do it, thanks for the feedback אביב מימון.
Bob!!!!!!!!!!!!! We need you Bob!!!! Happy new year Keith thanks!
Thank you Buenos Días gracias
I not only enjoyed this video, I actually learned a lot which was the most important thing. I watched this specifically to supplement learning VLAN Trunking and I learned enough to say I understand. The Cup Props was AMAZING to convey the actuality of things. The only thing you did not show was an actual physical demonstration of how the switches are connected in a Trunk Switch to Switch. But i get the idea now. I was always confused as to why there was two physical cables connected for the Trunking. I think it dawned on me finally when you did "show Interface trunk" and in the last section info i think i understood now that STP is actually working on one the loop connections. If i'm incorrect please let me know. Too bad i didn't get CBTN validation credits for watching 42 mins of this video.
Thank you for participating, and for the feedback. Learning is its own reward. :) Thank you for being part of this channel. I appreciate it.
My 4 year-old son just told me he can't wait to explain trunking to his teacher.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge in a easy to understand format! Much appreciated!
Glad it was helpful!
OMG: You are totally changed from Boy to Man, since I last you in 2007. As usual Good stuff. Nice to hear your voice! Thank you
Thank you Abdul Taqi! Glad you are here.
This cups visual is genius! The tag helps me out!
Thank you Pete Nowikow!
Really enjoy these tutorials Keith. Keep up the excellent teaching 😊
Thank you Jon Clegg!
Came looking for knowledge, found a journey.
Thank you Ric pen! Welcome.
Great shirt, Keith. Words to live by! Thank you for the knowledge transfer as well.
Thank you Patrick Kinane! Glad you are here.
Keith Barker thank you! I sent you a different picture from CLUS via dm on LinkedIn.
Loved the cups, great way to demonstrate the concept👍
Thank you Chris!
good explanation , I never ever will get such kind of explanation on this concept.
Good job. Again thanks for sharing knowledge us.
Happy to help
Thank you!
Thank you. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord
Thanks again!
Thanks Keith..
First time I understand trunking :)
I don't have any words with that I appreciate you.
Thank you Ghulam.
Hi Keith and thank you so much for your work here! I'm eager to pull this certification in so i can stop farming it out to others and provide better service. I'm 55, self taught on most things but this topic needs a great instructor and you are it. On this video, why 2 trunks?
Thank you for the question Mike. Usually, if we are using more than 1 physical link between switches, it is for either fault tolerance (in case one fails), more throughput (if we use EtherChannel (separate video), or both! Hope that helps. Enjoy the whole CCNA playlist here: ogit.online/sloth New videos added to that playlist each week.
Thanks again Mike, glad you are here!
wonderful videos please add more topics regarding ccna cert
Thank you Keith.
Happy to do it, thanks for the feedback Michael He.
Holy cows! I didn't know PING was an acronym. I always thought it was called "ping" based after "sonar ping" like what submarines do.
Thank you David Laufer
Wow awesome explanation 🙏 thanks very much KB please keep it up
Most welcome 😊
Hi, Keith so far I am really enjoying your video thank you so much, Can you also please create a video where you actually type this command, and tools do you, please suggest how to practice on our own what type of question we should create while doing any of the commands.
Thank you for the question Adarsh. Which specific commands are you interested in?
GREAT Videos Thank you very much.
You are welcome!
I'm from the year 2022. I just time travelled to 2019 to watch this.
Thank you Brian Ratanya!
Hello sir,
Thank you for all your hard work ❤🌸
Thank you Ismaeel Laith! Glad you are here.
i love your t-shirt....awesome message!
Thank you Karan B20! ♥
Great video. Thank you.
Very Nice work. But I'm wondering, in your example, vlan 10 and vlan 20 are on different physical switches and you use a trunk between them. But would you use a trunk if vlan 10 and vlan 20 were on the same physical switch?
As a side note. We really should set the switchport mode on all ports, especially the ones, we don't want to use as trunk ports. Otherwise an attacker, could connect to a port, and have switch set it self to trunk. And have access to all VLANS.
Thank you kjakobsen!
THANKYOU A LOTTTTTT for sharing such wonderful videos..looking for ospf n/w typess...AWESOMMEEE!!!!
Thank you Arijit Das! That OSPF network types happens on 1/1/2020. Will also add the recording of that live stream to the CCNA Playlist on RUclips here: ogit.online/sloth Thanks!
Hey Keith,
Thanks for your videos 😊
I have a question, do we always need to have two interfaces on each switch to configure trunking?
Can't we configure trunking with just one interface on each side?
That is correct. Only 1 physical connection can be used for a trunk.
HAPPY-NEW-YEAR K.B ,am just now and today joined the course and this is new course of " network access 2.2.b topic ?
Thank you aklilu abay! Yes, this is definitely in the 2.2.b section of the new 200-301 blueprint! I made a playlist, that gets updated weekly. Catch the videos in order using the playlist here: ogit.online/sloth Thanks for the comments!
Thanks for another free awesome content!
Any time!
Bob and Lois are going to be used by many future network engineers as example users... they're going to be as famous as "John Appleseed"
you remind me of Steve-O.
Excellent Video! I have a Question: How do I and from where do I memorize all the commands ? and How do I know what I get/obtain for a particular command ? I know it comes from practice but from where do I get and memorize all the commands? Hope Keith or anyone could answer my question! Thanks once again for explaining so well Keith! You really are a Networking Rockstar! :)
Thank you Khasim Shareef. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord
Thanks again Khasim Shareef!
@@KeithBarker Hello Keith! Thanks a lot for your reply! I will most definitely join the discord server so I could ask you questions on topics I am studying and also could discuss things with others too. Thank you very much once again, Keith! Kind Regards, Khasim
Keith, when you say "Don't count on it happening dynamically', it sounds like that is a possibility but the best practice is to designate trunk ports specifically, yes?
Nice and great information
802.1q got it. Thank you very much....
Great example I thank you excellent work
You are welcome!
Wonderful vid Keith, much appreciated. Any reason why you used 2 switch ports on each side as trunk ports? Are there any rules on how many is needed? Thanks!
I found this from another comment, "Usually, if we are using more than 1 physical link between switches, it is for either fault tolerance (in case one fails), more throughput (if we use EtherChannel (separate video), or both! Hope that helps."
Hello Keith, awesome video. One question, how is tagging done on access ports? Do they send out tagged frames as well?
Thank you Adil Akhmetov. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord
Thanks again Adil Akhmetov!
Man, I get it when you explain it!!
Thank you Mohammed Abdul-Kadir!
Random Trivia... In ALL my years working with computers in general, I don't recall ever even thinking to ask what PING stood for.. I assumed it was a sonar reply, which it also is..... Thanks!
Good point!
Simple presentation but powerful 👍
Thank you Sujith Kailas! Glad you are here.
You do a fantastic job with your delivery. Your passion to teach is great. You lost me on “skin tag”. What the heck is that? Sounds painful 😀
Thank you Lee. I hope the tag I was referring to was an 802.1Q tag. Happy studies.
@@KeithBarker It's going to stick in my mind now. I'll ask my doc what is a skin tag next time I see him LOL
I never know if I'm studying what I need to know for the exam. Ive taken a couple free practice exams and it seems those questions are stuff I've never covered. Is this normal or am I just freaking out?
Thank you Dwayne, I hear you. The safest thing to do is look at the blueprint, and see whether or not you feel you can meet the requirements listed there.
This video walks through the blueprint, starting at about the 28 minute mark: ruclips.net/video/pqvhNrsl1Kc/видео.html
Happy studies
What are the odd i am currently reading atomic habits and watching this video to prepare for CCNA. 😂
I love learning about the trunking protocols. I picked up on them quickly but I always feel like I can learn more and dig deeper. What's a good source, besides this one, that takes a deeper look at 802.1q trunking?
www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2674.txt
@@KeithBarker I suppose that was the most obvious answer, which I didn't think of. Thank you!
why does two cables are required for trunking ? what if we have one cable connection between switches. will this trunking work??
very clear and understandable breakdown of trunking. alot of thanks sir for making it easier for me.
and the music in the background I love it, would love to know the title and the artist so that i can download for myself ❤️👌
You are very welcome
when we say switches filter packets? Shouldn't it be switches filter frames as switches operate at level 2 and at level 2 we refer to data as frames?
we need to trunking to elimminate backloop as well.
Thank you Sam!
Thanks for this video!!
My pleasure!
2:50
give love
get love
repeat
Isn't that a switching loop???
Thank you for that!
You say there's no interest in ROAS ? Apparently I'm in the minority. I was fascinated implementing it in a PTSA Final for CCNAv7 SRWE. I'd be interested to hear/see you break it down, for a better understanding. Thanks a lot for all your great content and great attitude
Thank you Scott Sparling!
loving this mate :)
Thank you Chris!
At 15:18, when the pc receives frame it decapsulate the frame from layer1 to 7. As it through, it has to see data link layer first, then it will see the 802.1Q tag but you said opposite to it.
Thank you Kamal.
Hello Keith, please take session for BGP protocol also. Thank you.
Thank you for the suggestion Gaurav Desai❗
In addition to talk about STP,are you going to talk about RSTP and the other versions of STP? I would really like to learn about the differences between the STP's out there aswell.
Thank you anders gjerløw! In the first one, I intend to address the basics, (election, root ports, designated ports), and then will follow up with more about RSTP and MST at a later date. I appreciate your input, thoughts, and participation.
Keith, in every videos there is an example given when pc1 tries to communicate with pc2. I just wanted to know at what point pc1 tries to communicate with pc2(real time ). Only when pinging? Sorry am a learner.
Thank you Kani Mozhi. Feel free to join my Discord sever. Lots of people there helping each other out. Each Saturday at 10am Pacific I hold my "Office Hour" where learners can ask questions about the topics they are studying. Mostly focusing on Cisco CCNA 200-301 topics. Feel free to join us there live if you are available. Here is the link ogit.online/Join_OGIT_on_Discord
Thanks again Kani Mozhi!
Hey Keith. Say in a scenario where it’s a PTP trunk link with a repeater Switch in the middle due to non line of sight. When you setup a LAG 1 between a main and redundant link and you need to setup a LAG 2 group that essentially for the repeater side, is there anything to keep in mind or will the packets just flow through load balanced path?
Great question. Much of that will depend on the type/function of that repeater switch. You may need to use QinQ tunneling if that repeater switch tries to think to much outside of keeping the individual connections/links isolated. Here is a resource for more on QinQ: www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/routers/access/ISRG2/software/feature/guide/QinQ_L2PT.html
Hope that helps, and thanks for the question.
Hi keith. If i may ask what do you use to show yourself and then share your screen with the training material?
Thank you for the question Jerry Ebanks! Glad you are here. I use OBS (open source free software) for the streaming. It has 2 scenes set up. One is a section of my monitor, and the other is my web camera. I use an Elgato "Stream Deck" to switch between them. Hope that helps, and thanks for your participation and your question.
Hi Keith, thanks for teaching us. Could you bringing us the name of music played? I liked
Thank you Eduuu. I rotate the music, so I am not sure which song that was. I use a service from www.epidemicsound.com/ and have several that I pull from. Thanks for the question, and enjoy the whole CCNA playlist ogit.online/sloth
Thanks
Sir , I really like your videos, Learn lot, want to get new CCNA cert.By the way great T-shirt. will watch all 200-301 series. Thank You.
Thanks and welcome Gautam!
I can appreciate the Wire Shark 'realo-world' capture, , which lacks in the netacad 'theory' material and Packet tracers. No mention of the VLAN tag fields, VLAN numeric ranges, and DTP? I mention this because a quick glance at the other 70+ videos in you MasterPlaylist I don't see them come up.. Im reviewing all of my notes from netacad, , trying to prepare for all the little things Cisco tries to fail people on.
Thank you Pauly-Wauly Doodlealdaday for your comments and thoughts.
@20:00 you said interface range mode allows us to configure both switches at the same time, but I assume you meant both interfaces.
Yes, the interface range command in Cisco IOS refers to performing a configuration for two or more ports or interfaces in the same switch, rather than doing it one by one.
Could you explain why we create two links for the Ethernet trunk ? Any cons to using a single link ?
Thank you for the question Addy! The benefit of 2, is for fault tolerance, in the event 1 of the links or interfaces fails, the other can keep going. One other (and better option) when using 2 links, is to configure them as an EtherChannel group, and that allow fault tolerance (in case 1 link or interface fails) and while they are both up, there is added bandwidth available.
Thanks for watching, and for the question.
Happy studies 😀
Keith Barker thanks a bunch for answering both of my questions Keith! Ur amazing 😁
@@addynaruto1221 My pleasure. 😀😀😀