Cisco CCNA Certification:  Five Key Combinations You Should Know Article Cisco CCNA Certification: Five Key Combinations You Should Know Article
    home | all categories | submit articles | about us | links | link to us | site map | contact us | recommended resources
 
Home » Articles » Computers » information_technology » Cisco CCNA Certification: Five Key Combinations You Should Know

Cisco CCNA Certification: Five Key Combinations You Should Know


By Chris Bryant

Cisco CCNA Certification:  Five Key Combinations You Should Know

When you start studying for your CCNA and CCNP exams, many books will present you with a huge list of keystroke shortcuts for use on Cisco routers. While the 640-801, 811, and 821 exams may ask you about one or two of these, you really have to get hands-on experience with these commands to master them. Even better, there are some key combinations that Cisco routers mention, but then don't tell you what they are! Let's take a look at a few of the more helpful key combinations, and conclude with the "secret" way to stop a ping or traceroute.

The up arrow on your keyboard is great for repeating the last command you typed. Let's say you mis-enter an access-list. Instead of typing it from the beginning, just hit your up arrow to repeat it, then fix the problem.

CTRL-A takes the cursor to the beginning of a typed line. If you've written an extended ACL, you know that can be a very long command, and one you probably don't want to retype. If you get a carat indicating there is a problem with the line, use your up arrow to repeat the command. If you see the error is near the beginning, use CTRL-A to move the cursor immediately to the beginning of the line. CTRL-E takes the cursor to the end of a typed line.

To move the cursor through a typed line without erasing characters, you've got a couple of options. I personally like to use the left and right arrows, but you can also use CTRL-B to move back and CTRL-F to move forward.

Finally, there's the combination that Cisco mentions to you when you run ping or traceroute, but they don't tell you what it is! If you send an extended ping or a traceroute, you could be looking at asterisks for a long time if you don't know this one. In the following example, a traceroute is obviously failing:

R2#traceroute 10.1.1.1

Type escape sequence to abort.

Tracing the route to 10.1.1.1

1 * * *

2 *

The problem is that you're going to get 30 rows of those asterisks, which is frustrating and time-consuming at the same time. Note the router console message "Type escape sequence to abort". That's helpful - but what is it?

Here it is: Just type CTRL-SHIFT-6 twice, once right after the other. You won't see anything on the router console, but the traceroute will terminate.

R2#traceroute 10.1.1.1

Type escape sequence to abort.

Tracing the route to 10.1.1.1

1 * * *

2 * * *

3

R2#
The traceroute was successfully terminated. This combination works for pings as well, both extended and regular. Of all the keystrokes you can learn, this one is the most valuable!



About the author

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage , home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials! Pass the CCNA exam with Chris Bryant! from http://www.FreeArticlesAndContent.com

Copy This Article For FREE!!!

You can use this article and copy it on your own website for free! All you have to do is make sure the article is copied with no changes and includes the "About The Author" text. Also please ensure that all url's are hyperlinked according. Thank you.

Link To This Article - And We'll Link Back To Your Website!

You are more then welcome to link to this article! All you have to do is copy this webpage address from the address bar and create a link on your website. Please use the title of this article for your link text. Please get in contact once you have linked to this article and we'll link back to you! Thank you.
 
Other great articles from this category...


The Usefulness Of A Proxy Site
Wednesday, 19th November 2008

Software To Benefit The Whole World
Tuesday, 18th November 2008

Using A HTTP Proxy Site
Wednesday, 5th November 2008

Using A HTTP Proxy Site
Sunday, 2nd November 2008

The Advantages Of Having A GPU
Tuesday, 28th October 2008

Finding A Good Proxy Server
Saturday, 18th October 2008


Related Sites





Free Articles

Unsecured Credit Card Application   Free Proxy   Motorola MotoPEBL   Dog Training
Copyright © 2005-2008 Your Marketing Ltd. All Rights Reserved