From: Brian Hescock (bhescock@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Nov 05 2000 - 22:54:56 GMT-3
Paul,
*Anything* can be on the lab and I would still study for items that
supposedly aren't on there any more. There are a lot of old tests the
proctors can pull from. Regarding not wanting to waste time, etc, the
CCIE lab isn't about getting that magical number, it's about the knowledge
you gain along the way.
I would definitely study Policy Routing because you need to know
route-maps anyway. Regarding QOS, it's all in the IOS command reference
so it's fair game. We really can't tell you anyway because everyone
that has taken the lab is governed by the Non-Disclosure Agreement.
Check CCO for what's covered on the lab and buy some books, such as
Caslow's. There's also a wealth of info in the e-mail archive for this
e-mail list.
Brian
On Mon, 6 Nov 2000 Paul.McClarnon@sita.int wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I am new to this group, I passed my written in August and have just my A into
G
> for study towards the Lab. One of my biggest problems is where to begin, ther
e
> is so much to learn. I have been going over the basic protocols like Rip, Rip
2 ,
> Igrp, Eigrp and Ospf to try and master a solid understanding before getting i
nto
> the complex stuff.
> I was reading about Policy routing and Qos on the weekend and was wondering h
ow
> much time and effort I should be spending on these sorts of configurations.
> Has anyone any idea of how deep they go into this on the Lab??
> I don't want to be wasting valuable time on issues that will have a slim
> chance of showing in the lab where I could be spending time on the more
> important protocols.
>
> Thanks for your advise
> Paul
>
>
>
>
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 08:25:42 GMT-3