correct to limit specifi users you would need to put something else in place.
A cheap and easy way would be to proxy your internet with squid and use the delay pools
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your dial-peer voice is setup to match dialed digits and send them where you need them to go.
your ephone-dn is your phone and extension setup
telephony-service is your CME configuration
http://router_ipaddress/ccme.html - this is your friend the web based admin for cme, its easy to use...
Depends on the traffic, you could setup QoS and in your policy specify traffic you want to give lower priority like P2P. Then give your essential traffic higher priority.
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Your cable modem is a bridge and is not doing any nat.
as far as your addressing I would bet money they have a dhcp reservation for your static. Meaning you will not assign it to your interface (ip address dhcp)If its not dhcp then your subnet mask IS wrong, would be something like...
Let take a another look at the facts:
half-duplex (setup on FE0 and FE1)
The bridges are functioning simply as a length of CAT 5
eventually total segregation of voice (layer 2) traffic and data (layer 3) traffic
output layer 2 traffic to one interface, and layer 3 traffic to the other...
You main goal is to seperate voice and data trafic the ONLY way you can do this (in your case) end to end is with vlan, you can setup your bridges with multiple vlans (this is done with multiple ssids) there is NO point in separating traffic after it has passed wirelessly over the bridge.
CCNA...
look into route maps, if you have all traffic coming in one interface you can use route maps to route certain traffic that matches what you specify, IE. route phone traffic to to fe0 and data to fe, they are setup like ACL's
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qos won't be setup on your switchports (you can still give priority to specific traffic on a aswitch) it should be setup on your routed interfaces (this is where you need it most on WAN links) . If you have cisco gear auto qos works nicely, look into setting all your voip devices to tag packets...
each dhcp pool you setup will only assign addresses to networks you have setup. So if you have a pool for 192.168.2.0 and you have a network 192.168.2.0 it will assign addresses in that network.
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Ouch I would be more concerned about the fact your are still using telnet to connect, SSL should be used or you might as well not even have a password. You should really think about using tacacs or radius if you have that many to manage.
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sdm can do it but hitting the command line isn't that hard do a search for cisco easy vpn you can setup all types of vpns and as the name states its Easy :)
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I think you are looking at this problem the wrong way. If you have a decent managed switch (doesn't have to be cisco) just setup the switch ports and router to have seperate vlans one for voice and one for data (of course you would need to setup the phones and call manager to the correct...
it would work just a well using one domain and three sites
just setup your sites for proper replication and make sure you have a GC at each site.
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what shows in the event log on the server and WS. are there roaming profiles or local.
whats changes have you made to active directory?
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I don't see how you ever got your ccnp, the IOS is cake. if you really must have one, cisco does have a web based tool (SDM) for 12.3.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/secursw/ps5318/index.html
Kinda like the pix PDM
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