The thing that I love about these videos is that if someone demonstrated this equipment to me like this when it came out, I would think it was the coolest thing ever. 25 years later, I work in the industry, and I'm still just as fascinated by it.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
haha I know what you mean
@alexevansuk6 ай бұрын
Back when there was no GUI and people really had to think with their heads!
@jdbarney8 ай бұрын
I love that equipment I installed and supported 25+ years ago is now so "vintage" to warrant KZbin content. I'm officially old.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
someday people will be making videos about "what windows 11 was like" ha
@dondayday7 ай бұрын
Amen to that!
@mtewner7 ай бұрын
Yep - I maintained a bunch of PIX515 clusters in the day, and moved on to Cisco ASA. So happy to not have dealt with Cisco Firepower!
@maxeatbug8 ай бұрын
this has quickly become one of my favorite creators and i really do not know why, i think its the genuine excitement in his demeanor when he talks about things he finds interesting and the fact that i also find them interesting
@littledudejoey8 ай бұрын
same here! i stop what im doing whenever clab uploads, the only youtuber i do that for. Something about enterprise hardware is just fascinating to me.
@dregenius8 ай бұрын
"This is obviously a bettuh setup - there's mo stuff hooked up!" ... This is a man after my own heart, I swear.
@iAmKilljoy8 ай бұрын
I'd love to see you rack ALL of your equipment. Like every piece hooked up in a rack in one GIANT, glorious configuration. Probably not feasible, but I think it'd look cool.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
someday! all the retro gear in one rack is definitely the eventual plan
@valeranordstrom71987 ай бұрын
It would be doable take awhile and probaly pretty pretty slow if you get the hubs involved but yeah it would be cool to see
@jjjjentges8 ай бұрын
There is a box full of old WICs sitting in our test lab at work. If you are looking for something specific let me know. Ton of sealed T1 cards in there. I also have some Checkpoints if you are looking for some late 2000s firewall tech. Cool to see a 2600 (way before my time). All of our internal routing at work is done with Layer 3 switches now, and the only dedicated routers we have are Cisco ASRs for edge routing. Plus, firewalls route pretty well too nowadays (I honestly prefer routing on Palo Alto more than cisco these days) Always enjoy the videos, keep it up boss
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
hey! I'd definitely be interested. if you're up for it you can reach out to the email in the channel's about page (might need to be on a desktop to see it).
@C41038 ай бұрын
I also have a "hub story." When I was young, before I knew the difference between a hub and a switch, a friend of mine sold me a Dell 24port hub out of the back of his car for $50. That thing powered so many LAN parties.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
haha that's awesome
@adamsavard5358 ай бұрын
Back in College (about 6 years ago now) they let us screw around with a bunch of old Cisco gear. Seeing those commands typed in brings back so many memories. Manually setting IPs and configuring switches... Those were the days.
@samfewster8 ай бұрын
I did my CCNA with a 2600 a long time ago now, this brings back memories!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
nice!
@blacktrooper1008 ай бұрын
I am a young network engineer working with Cisco stuff and the issue with the hub forgetting the mac of the XP Machine actually reminded me a lot of an issue I saw within the last year or so where some machines that don't send packets very often would drop off the MAC tables of switches exceptionally quickly so one of my scripts to check the mac tables to figure out which port a computer was plugged into would only work if the computer had been communicating in the same few moments around when I checked. Interesting to see a similar phenomena from hardware released 4 years before I was born!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Awesome! Yeah I wonder if it dropped the table when I plugged in the module or something. Network was still totally operational.
@wirelesspizza8 ай бұрын
Loving this content! Also interesting that it might have been from PHH Mortgage in Syracuse, NY. Must have been a branch router with two T1's from Verizon. What a time to be alive.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Thanks! I bet you're right based on that host name it briefly flashed on the screen
@noratube1238 ай бұрын
Really enjoying these on the Saturday morning. Best way to start the weekend!!
@Redd008 ай бұрын
Man I love these videos as a Cisco networking guy the older Cisco routing/switches/hub/firewall are very similar to the newer technology.
@jonvincent51588 ай бұрын
I've got a 2611XM serving as a dial in gateway for my legacy lab. You can fill that larger WIC slot with an NM-8AM card and get 8 33.6k modems to mess with. I've got that piped into an Adit channel bank connected to an adtran that feeds it a T1 RBS signal for 24 single phone lines. That comes back to Asterisk and from Asterisk out to my SIP provider. Probably should start calling it my home telco instead of home lab lol.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
sounds awesome haha. yeah now that I have this stuff I think it'll be a rabbit hole
@JohnKiniston8 ай бұрын
This sounds like such a fun lab setup.
@simon5158 ай бұрын
The Laser sticker on the FastHub has Swedish written on it: "Apparaten skall anslutas till ett jordat nätuttag". Wonder if it lived some of it's days in Sweden?
@studioxxswe8 ай бұрын
it must have been sold in Sweden, that's the regulation here (and most of Europe) around grounded power (specially for rack mounted equipment)
@kicksledkid8 ай бұрын
That's so wild, those T1 cards probably came out of the office building next to mine
@amak11318 ай бұрын
A couple of tips having worked on Cisco: -Doing just "wr" will save the config. -A lot of commands can be shortened, configure terminal for example can be config t -When you're within config t, you can execute commands like wr using "do" so you don't need to back out to the prompt. This is handy for "do sh run" from my experience iOS can take some learning, but it is fairly simple once you get the hang of it. Think in my 15+ yrs of working on Cisco, I've only seen commands for making VLANS change.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
nice, I didn't know about "do"
@serpent778 ай бұрын
FYI - With the cisco equipment you can download the firmware from one device and push it back to another one with the copy command and tftp. No need to go hunting for another copy :)
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
it's funny, I was wondering about that while I was flashing it. I'll have to try that out
@jfbeam8 ай бұрын
Not sure you can do that with the Pix. (at least prior to v7 where flash actually has a filesystem.) These days, to get anything for older gear (2500, 2600, etc.) you'll have to beg the internet as Cisco has deleted them from history. (I have a selection from my era of running them.)
@serpent778 ай бұрын
@@jfbeam I seem to recall doing it with both of my old pix515s. I still have one around somewhere. Maybe after I'm done setting up my new (to me) asa5525x failover pair I should try to find it to check again. But yes, I also remember torenting 1gb+ zip files full of outdated cisco images still hidden behind a tac paywall. I probably still have one or two of those around somewhere too.
@jfbeam8 ай бұрын
@@serpent77Just confirmed with the old 506 running 6.3, there's no interface for copying _out_ of flash. v7+ puts an actual filesystem in flash that does support general access. (confirmed from the 515 with 8.0) IOS, of course, has always supported both - even a tftp-server to feed files directly.
@serpent778 ай бұрын
@@jfbeam It would appear I stand corrected, thx for confirming.
@Stoyon3 ай бұрын
Back in 2006-2008 and in 2009-2011 I took the CCNA classes in trade school, and we used Cisco 2600 routers and Cisco 2950 in the lab. The first years we also had 2500 routers. Nostaligia...
@BryanSeitz7 ай бұрын
Nice Nostalgia! (Our HS had ... not even dialup for students in the early 90s)
@JF_ARVA8 ай бұрын
Been in the industry since these were new, still amazing demonstrations of the kind of solutions IT has always been striving for - high availability equipment that stays out of sight, out of mind.
@itismezed8 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, my guy-videos like this are why I’m into networking. :)
@ToucheFarming8 ай бұрын
In my high school CIS class we used the 2600 series for labs, it was fun
@markpriceful8 ай бұрын
Great perseverance, so nice to see this working in full effect! at 30:48 this reminded me of the main annoyance of working with ASA failover pairs- the hostnames! It would have been so useful to have been able to set globally unique device hostnames so you could know which unit you were logged in to. Pretty tight failover, you lost 5 pings, I hope this meets your basement enterprise SLA :)
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
my SLO error budget is in shambles. yeah that host name really tripped me up for a moment haha
@tymscar8 ай бұрын
I was waiting for PIX for so long. Im hyped!
@Frankfurtdabezzzt8 ай бұрын
Thanks for showing these! Old networking hardware is alwys cool to see. Switching from admin to devops I also really miss fiddling with real hardware, but don't really have the space at home for a homelab. These videos are absolute zen.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks for watching!
@budderbrotDEАй бұрын
Hi, i just want to say that your videos kinda influenced my job ideas and now i started an apprenticeship at the local city administrations IT department and what i learned today is that there was some cisco stuff (2600 series, 1700 series and 800 series) to be shreddered soon, i give 3 guesses whats now in my stack™ xDD. so thank you for all the work you do to entertain (and educate in a lot of cases) us we all love you for that :D
@clabretroАй бұрын
I'm glad to hear that! and nice additions to your collection!
@TrolleyMC8 ай бұрын
God, what beautiful equipment.
@douro207 ай бұрын
MPC860- the first PowerQUICC SoC released as far as I know. They still make space-grade single-board computers with PowerQUICC SoCs. The CPU on the management module in that FastHub is actually a 486.
@BestSpatula8 ай бұрын
On modern ASAs, the failover and heartbeat are over regular Ethernet, and many have SFP sockets for these interfaces allowing you to place your secondary unit in another building. And the failover is nearly invisible when initiated manually, which gives you completely hitless software updates. Recently took out a pair of 5585-X units, which has build quality far exceeding the vintage PIX units demonstrated in this video.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I've heard good things about ASA.
@AZEMBadlen8 ай бұрын
I had a course on cisco on high school (2016) and yet I didn't know how cool can network gear be. This is amazing, I love watching this during cooking (yeah sometimes something burns because I am just looking at my screen amazed by video). Thanks.
@fs4838 ай бұрын
Good old 515E! I have a bunch of 501, 506E and a couple of ASA5505 laying around. Have been replacing the 5505 with Fortigate lately. I have bunch of old hardware like yours lying around...
@revealingfacts4all8 ай бұрын
I owned an ISP back in late 90s early 2000s and had many 2600 routers. You probably know this but figured I'd mention couple things. 1. you can make a cross over cable for the T1 lines if you want to experiment in your lab between two 2600. 2. configure terminal can be shorten with config t and copy run start can be used to copy your running config to startup config. WOW, brings back memories, I spent so many hours inside that IOS interface back then. Many of my customers were T1 customers. You can also do T1 bonding with 2, or 4 T1 DSU cards. 2xT1s would get your 3Mb/s and if I recall, if one of the T1s goes down, you can fall back to 1.4Mb/s.... Enjoy the trip through memory lane.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Awesome! I'm definitely gonna have to dive into the T1 world... and I didn't even think about bonding, that'll be really cool to try out!
@JohnKiniston8 ай бұрын
I used so many of those 2600’s for leased lines and wans back in the day.
@Nabeelco8 ай бұрын
Pro Tip with Super Glue: Less is more, get it on the face of the two surfaces that are mating, and press the two surfaces together as hard as you can for at least 30 seconds, minimum. The reason less is more is because less cures faster. The reason you want it on the face of the mating surfaces and pressed together hard for 30 seconds is because that gives it the greatest contact area for it to bond to, with the thinnest application for when it cures and crystalizes. Applying crazy glue to the outside of the break does nothing but make it harder for the glue inside the mating surfaces to out-gas, cure and crystalize. The reason super glue is strong is BECAUSE of how quickly it cures. Using more than the least possible amount, ruins the strength of the glue.
@DardeeChar8 ай бұрын
Playing CS 1.5 and Tribes back in the day and everyone was raving about T1 and T3 etc hahaha :P
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
exactly ha
@ytmadpoo8 ай бұрын
Not sure how this showed up in my recommended videos, but it was interesting nonetheless. Back in the 2000's I setup a few HA pairs of this exact model and yeah, it was pretty amazing. Love to see these old things really get a wider audience. It's not like the 515s were super rare back then but it's just something not a lot of people were aware of unless you were a net/system admin, so it's nice to see them get some proper love.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Nice! They've been fun to learn and mess around with, still impressive to see them work so well all these years later.
@XDymeStarX8 ай бұрын
I was a network engineer in that period and installed many Cisco hardware for a communications company. This video gave me good vibes of that period and I really enjoyed that job. You did a fantastic job, well done ! Looking forward to that 7200, I still have one installed in my rack.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thank you! awesome to hear you've got a racked 7200
@TradieTrev8 ай бұрын
Love how you mentioned lan parties, some of these switches were our bread and butter back in the day. Great explanation as always mate!
@aeleequis8 ай бұрын
I love the continuity of your videos
@SB-qm5wg8 ай бұрын
I had to learn these along with Cisco CAT OS. I kept my running configs on floppies 👴The old stuff did have amazing quality. Too bad Cisco's licenses weren't built to last :p
@ethanriverpage8 ай бұрын
Easily has become one of my favorite channels on KZbin. This Cisco stuff is so cool. Please get the T1 stuff going! T1 was before my time so I’d love to learn more about it
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks! I'll definitely mess around with the T1 stuff since I've got two capable routers now. if you haven't seen The Serial Port's ISP videos about T1 they're great!
@toshihitsu19897 ай бұрын
Ues to have to maintain a pix firewall 515E was used exclusively at the business. I worked at between 2010 and 2015. They were really reliable. Never really had an issue with it. Was very easy to maintain and configure back when I was working with Cisco products
@JZB-20228 ай бұрын
BTW: the "no service password-encryption" line in the original config means that password encryption of otherwise plaintext passwords was disabled and could be veiwed in plaintext by looking at the config. This would not apply to passwords set using the "secret" command as those are always encrypted. Also, instead of typing out "copy running-config startup-config" you can just type "wr" instead (wr is short for write).
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ah thanks!
@adampope51078 ай бұрын
Wr doesn't always work. Sometimes you have to configure an alias for it. I think that's usually for Nexus gear though.
@johnkreno24888 ай бұрын
PHH is also out of NJ in the US, really enjoy your videos. I was just starting my career in that era, and it's fun to see this stuff again.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@labbiee8 ай бұрын
You are one of my favourite creators right now. I've always loved networking, but this older stuff is so cool!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thank you!
@kc0eks8 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing a very interesting video. Also props on audio quality, sounds great and I don't hear any mouth noises and clicks (many channels have horrible audio)
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Thanks! I'm always trying to improve it, it's been a journey.
@GeoLotMach778 ай бұрын
MG chemicals... I respect you for using the good stuff!! I do use 99% alcohol but for the final touches always use specialized stuff like MG... Also contact cleaner and low pressure air on motherboards/sockets/cpu/ram. And always avoid repairing PSUs units except replacing fans.
@Codeaholic18 ай бұрын
I worked for 9 years at a University starting in 1998. Cisco was considered luxury. We had each closet connected with fiber and ATM links. That would break out with stacks and stacks of Cabletron hubs, one of the worst network vendors. The single thing that pushed the buracacy of education to change to a switched topology was not speed, management, or scalability. No it was security. People, using telnet, mind you, were getting their passwords stolen. In 2002 once we decided to upgrade we tried to get Cisco ethernet switches, but they were too costly. I dont remember the brand that won out, but i think the name started with the letter V or N. They were nice with vlaning and vlan gateways, trunking, etc. Edit: pretty sure they were Nortel switches.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ha awesome. was thinking about trying out some ATM links
@kmontoya878 ай бұрын
the windows technical books being used as a monitor stand in the background in one of your final shots is priceless with some mild DeJa'Vu I might add because at the office I'm on a SFF with display #1 on top of the chassis and display #2, you guessed it...the books :P - thank you so much for this content.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
haha awesome
@matthewnokes18598 ай бұрын
Love these retro networking gear videos! There's something oddly fascinating about these old networking systems. Keep up the great content!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks!
@TimDousset8 ай бұрын
If you want switches to match your 515s and 2600 - you want the 1900 series. 10M ports with 100M uplinks. The FastHub type front bezel is in line with the 2900 2U series of switches like the WS-C2924M-XL.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I think a 1900 series switch is in my future
@truckerallikatuk8 ай бұрын
And you're right, that Celeron is a Pentium II, but without cache. Some later Pentium 2 chips did come on that socket, example the MMX chips.
@redgek8 ай бұрын
Dude I love your channel, the presentation is so good that I always tune in even if I think the subject won't be interesting for me, but you always make it interesting. Thank you for sharing!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thank you!
@Consequator8 ай бұрын
I can smell some of the things from that HUB having ended up in CatOS, I used to have a big 12 blade Catalyst 5500 that I managed, that was originally from 98 i think, and it was a BEAST. It survived lightning strikes and the only reason we ended up replacing it was due to needing VOIP (QOS tagging), POE and more gigabit ports. It really did make me sad because it was such a great device to work with as we had one of the newer supervisor modules. Never managed to get it above 20% load even when dropping a Ghost image via broadcast to around 100 computers.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
those blade units look like absolute monsters
@adam111jansson5 ай бұрын
"This thing is 26 years old, makes you wonder if your the first one in here" Lol
@spacewolfjr8 ай бұрын
You seem like a man I could be a best friend with.
@spacewolfjr8 ай бұрын
Next time you're passing through Edmonton, beers on me :)
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Ha, thank you!
@JohnKiniston8 ай бұрын
For an idea, combine your Sunray setup with the piix setup, the sunrays can wan boot right? You could show failover streaming a full desktop!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ohhh now that would be interesting!
@simon5158 ай бұрын
@@clabretroThat would be cool, do it!
@JMassengill8 ай бұрын
Hub? Hub! Er, um, I’m so confused. In 2010 I was throwing all hubs off the network. Hubs are a nightmare on larger networks. Great video.
@JMassengill8 ай бұрын
May I suggest LibreNMS as a great open source SNMP platform. It can be picky to setup but is rock solid once you get it configured
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I was thinking about messing around with LibreNMS, thanks!
@JMassengill8 ай бұрын
If you want help to set that up, I would be happy to offer my help.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks! I'll let you know if I get stuck
@waldfruchttee8 ай бұрын
small tip for repairing plastics (if you want them realy strong that is) use superglue with baking soda for a stone like bond
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I've heard about that, I'll have to try it
@jamess17878 ай бұрын
When you changed the confreg, it wiped the config as you found. In rommon you can "rename" the flash:/startup_config to flash:/clabretro and reboot the system. Once it boots, you can copy the file to the running_config, delete the other file, while you have privilleged access: you can show the previous configuration. All without changing the confreg. I think the config registers are so resellers can wipe the config fairly simply. Youre welcome.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ah-ha, makes sense
@jamess17878 ай бұрын
A well, for catalyst; ASR and some other platforms are different (like their weird old 802.11 wireless bridges, etc)
@AnonyDave8 ай бұрын
I can't speak for that cisco hub, but back in the early 2000's my home network was running off an hp managed hub (that I got for free). While they couldn't do all the fun stuff of managed switches like 802.1q vlans, they had a feature quite similar. You could partition the hub. So you could have ports 1, 2, 5 & 6 in one segment (broadcast domain), then 3 and 4 in a separate segment. Absolutely blew my mind at the time
@fs4838 ай бұрын
There is one company that has a rack in a datacenter where I have some of my equipment that still uses the 515e in a production environnement...
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
doesn't surprise me!
@alexbenevides73648 ай бұрын
i would love to see some T1 content
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
yeah once I learn how to use it I'll make some videos 😂
@emils_lab8 ай бұрын
Can’t wait to follow this series! Keep it up!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks!
@HiSmartAlarms8 ай бұрын
Nice, was hoping to see this working! Keep up the awesome content!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
thanks!
@foxworth427 ай бұрын
Of all the things to suddenly key in on and notice, that XP machine came out of a car dealership at one point based on having both an ADP install agent as well as CDK Driver icon on the desktop...
@clabretro7 ай бұрын
haha good eye. close: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bp-1d52tgpqprbc
@cmckain138 ай бұрын
Oh, this is going to be fun.
@arizonapalms8 ай бұрын
Screw you man. Every time you upload something I go straight to eBay and look at overpriced vintage networking gear that I don't need but MUST have. The addiction is real! Another great vid, that hub is so cool I had no idea they had managed hubs at one point I've always had bottom of the barrel no brand name hubs that had all sorts of collision issues 😅😅
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Haha. Yeah that hub is wild, I also just used crappy no-name 8 port deals that always sucked.
@ShaunMcCloud8 ай бұрын
Its a Celeron 300A, Mendocino core. Back in the day I had a Slot 1 version running at 504 Mhz with a gigantic AlphaCool heatsink with 2 Delta 60mm screamers on it. As for the Cisco gear, I do not enjoy IOS, but I can function in it if needed.
@colinstu8 ай бұрын
Love this! (Also, now that I can vicariously live the retro cisco world through you... if you need any other gear ideas...) 2948G-GE-TX I *think* is Cisco's first dedicated gigabit switch? I think may've been gigabit modules for their modular switches before perhaps. It's also 1.5U .. so kinda weird/neat. There's also the WS-C3550-12T / WS-C3550-12G... also fairly old gigabit switches but came after the one above. the 12T being 12x RJ45s and 12G being 10x GBIC (which you could then plug in gig modules) + 2x RJ45s. Always kinda wanted to poke around with them but knew I'd get very little use and there's so much to do already.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I was thinking about hunting down some early gigabit switches!
@colinstu8 ай бұрын
@@clabretro Are you going to eventually dig into CallManager & get a 7960G phone? And/or dig into an Aironet 1100... whip out an old Thinkpad and connect to that. Could really have a sweet 2002 setup.
@Retroman80778 ай бұрын
I've got quite a bit of used racknount modulators from all 30 of our tv vans from the 80s and 90s before we figured it was cheaper to go up and down linked best part about them is the have out and return 4 inch monitors built into 3 rack space units. We used em for coax drops all over Boston. You want em just reimburse me for the shipping after u receive them. They all work with manuals and VHS operation videos. Plus I got a ton of leader vector/waveforms and coax/fiber converters that used to cost 10g a price but nowadays they are 199 bucks new lol let me know be happy to donate to someone who'll use em. I can use the storage space in the studio. Just don't remember where they came from if u broadcast off them lol
@mattelder19718 ай бұрын
I'm not surprised that the processor was reported as a Pentium II. Back when Celerons and Pentium IIIs were first released in the Socket 360 form factor, many early BIOS would report Celerons as Pentium IIs. Took manufacturers a year or two to get the processor identification correct.
@RandomTechWZ8 ай бұрын
Vintage networking is pretty cool.
@LeeZhiWei82198 ай бұрын
Man, I couldn't wait for the next installment of the PIX! And it is awesome.
@LeeZhiWei82198 ай бұрын
Man, ethernet hubs.... The pre-switch haha...
@LeeZhiWei82198 ай бұрын
Man. T1.... Reminds me of the serial port YT channel lol. Also the newer Cisco 1941 routers (which I own) still take WIC, in terms of EHWIC cards as well.
@LeeZhiWei82198 ай бұрын
Newer Cisco stuff. They are still super high quality. Hefty. And still modular! I upgraded my Cisco 1941 with DDR2 ram, to 4Gigs and still boots.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I love all the modularity
@LeeZhiWei82198 ай бұрын
@@clabretrodude! I'm actually trying to get my CCNA in a couple of weeks. So hahaha... Willing to help if you wanna configure these lol.
@Tumleren8 ай бұрын
I'm currently in school for it support and I love gear like this. We train on 2900 switches and 4300 routers. Writing configuration scripts for IOS and firing them away and have it just work is so fun and rewarding. A shame that management stuff is moving to the cloud if you ask me
@chairthrower8 ай бұрын
The different case designs could also be a vestige of the equipment being made by different vendors that Cisco acquired.
@dominick2538 ай бұрын
That's funny I was just thinking of setting up a redundant virtual router for my main router.
@JZB-20228 ай бұрын
The many-port FastEthernet card you mentioned for the 2600 series router would problably only funtion at a layer 2 level, meaning essentially a built in switch. This means that you could not just use one of those ports as a regular layer 3 router port. If the description for the card mentions anything about having "switched ethernet ports" that is what this is refering to.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
that's a good point, I'll check that. was also thinking about hunting down an ethernet WIC (assuming those exist)
@fbeverborg8 ай бұрын
I don't even think that the switch card is supported in the 2600 line, I think you need a 3620 for that. Also note that this only takes 10Mbit WICs.
@RealEngineer8 ай бұрын
Wooohhoooo!! One again a great video! 🎉🎉
@chaseohara47818 ай бұрын
I have done this rommon password reset so very many times ❤😂
@ВиталийБойко-з5й8 ай бұрын
Lot of interesting vintage stuff, I wonder if you could grab one of the very early Mikrotik routers to tinker with, thanks for content, nonetheless
@JakeCovey8 ай бұрын
I love all my Cisco buddies
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
🥰
@KingTrump20248 ай бұрын
The 2600's ran the internet for years !
@Jonathan.Boring8 ай бұрын
Excited for the PIX stuff
@JamesBos8 ай бұрын
All that T1 equipment… 😮 would love to see something in the vein of The Serial Port where they set up their own dial up ISP…except T1 😊
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
yeah I'll get something going, won't be as impressive as their full blown ISP though haha
@SeishukuS128 ай бұрын
Cisco really liked x86 hardware didn't they, the management module for that hub runs a 486. lol
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ha yes. cheaper than custom chip dev I suppose
@zeekyboogydoog468 ай бұрын
Good catch, that's wild. A 486sx-25 would have still been a (barely) usable desktop processor in '96, crazy amount of power for a management module.
@lauram59058 ай бұрын
You could still buy 486 modules as of relatively recently, actually. They were popular in embedded industrial computers in the PC/104 standard. The STPC Atlas being an example
@jfbeam8 ай бұрын
Well, the company's Cisco _bought_ did. The systems they designed (like the 2600) use MIPS processors. When they got around to designing their own switches, they too use MIPS. (What we see here is either a Kalpana or Cresendo device.)
@waterup3808 ай бұрын
wish I knew what Nic or however you spell it meant and it was great to learn how this old stuff works with today's internet
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
network interface card, I should have mentioned the full name!
@waterup3808 ай бұрын
@@clabretro thanks
@LB4FH8 ай бұрын
I love these old Cisco videos, such a throwback. Do you have a switch with VLAN support? In that case you could probably set the 2600 up with two virtual interfaces on the same ethernet port and work it as a very hacky router 😉
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I do, good idea haha
@LB4FH8 ай бұрын
That may have happened on a production system or two back in the day@@clabretro, although I take no blame for that 😉
@Jonathan.Boring8 ай бұрын
I love this series. I have some old IT gear I need to spin up and make some videos on 😂
@rayneradam8 ай бұрын
Signed up for the Patreon purely for the Networking 😂
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
Haha thanks!
@simon5158 ай бұрын
Thanks alot Mort xD
@jonathanschober10328 ай бұрын
My mortgage today is with PHH Corporation!
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
ha! don't tell them I took their router
@bentyler8 ай бұрын
Another great video. Have you tried Loctite Plastic Bonding instead of superglue? It is the bomb and much stronger than super glue and does not melt plastic. It has been a lifesaver with 3D prints. $5 at Walmart or Lowes.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
I haven't, I'll give that stuff a try!
@phir0002Ай бұрын
You should try to acquire a Cisco Local Director. It's basically a PIX but instead of a firewall, the Local Director is a load balancing appliance.
@haxorflakes8 ай бұрын
WIC and HWIC are two different types of cards. so for the 2610 you would need just a plain WIC card.
@damirkvajo8 ай бұрын
I knew it would work when I saw that one of the chips is called Supergator :)
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
haha I know. I only noticed that during editing
@gangaskan22558 ай бұрын
if you wanted to look at the config before you wiped the device, you could have done a copy start run because you're still in exec it would keep you in priv mode and you can reset the password at that point. dont forget to change the register though.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
yeah I did it wrong haha. same outcome though
@HFkepley93128 ай бұрын
Modern gear you can use console cable or even mini usb cable. I have mine setup using a serial telenet server. If you are talking about meraki type of Cisco gear those require a subscription and can be accessed over the internet by IT. I actually have my home network running off of cisco networking gear using two 3560X 48port POE+ Switches and a Cisco 3825 Router. My firewall however is not Cisco it is a Netgate hardware running PfSense+ and using a Lantronix EDS4100 4-Port COM Server powered over POE to be able to login and configure the equipment over the network.
@HFkepley93128 ай бұрын
Also if you get a Netgate hardware with PfSense+ you can use the same Cisco Console cable to configure the Netgate Firewall hardware along with using a usb cable. You can also configure the netgate PfSense+ firewall over the network but can be kind of tricky as you would need to find out what the IP address it is using along with using the first port marked as LAN and if you are wanting it do any logging then you need one that has dedicated NVME storage which is typically the MAX version. The one I have is Netgate 6100 MAX which is one you can either have sitting on a desk, wall mounted, or even rack mounted.
@Codeaholic18 ай бұрын
I would have thought stateful would mean TCP or UDP if it understands the high level protocol, like FTP or SIP. There is no firewall state needed for ICMP.. Try establishing an ssh session then see if it survives a fail over.
@clabretro8 ай бұрын
yeah ssh would be a cool test once I configure the stateful failover