Sorry to make this a 2 parter...
but if you want to use caller ID..
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/12cgcr/dial_c/dccallid.htm
has some very good information..
Ciao!
Andy }:-)
Well, to make a long story short try:
1. http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/793/access_dial/async_ppp.html
For router to PC callback..
and
2.http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/793/access_dial/isdn-ppp-callback.html
for ISDN callback...
G/L!
Andy ;-)
Actually, NetBios will never be routeable, since it is a layer 5 protocol. TCP/IP resides at layer 3. It's a small 2 layer encapsulation that takes place. (NetBeui is a layer 4 protocol)
andy
Jay,
Depends on how you want to run things, and what kind of cisco eqipment you have.
The best bet is to have the external interface of the router (that goes to the i-net) have the real world address and the internal interface have a private 10.10 address. But from what I'm guessing, this...
Brian,
Mike is correct, also try the following:
Turn on udp forwarding of ports 137 and 138 on the routers. This is how you do it:
ip forward-protocol udp 137
ip forward-protocol udp 138
Then, on the interface enable an ip helper address:
ip helper (other ethernet subnetwork address)
In...
Bridging would really only be used if you have more that one router on the network. I can't see why that would be a problem.
Try this first (if you haven't done it already):
Goto a command prompt, type net diag. Answer no to the question:
Is Microsoft Network Diagnostics currently running...
Actually, that's not entirely correct. NetBeui is not a routable protocol as lars stated above, Neither is NetBios because Microsoft, in their infinate wisdom decided to keep NetBios at layer 5 instead of layer 4. (OSI model) You are correctin the fact that NetBios piggy-backs TCP/IP, but in...
Or if you want to even get MORE technical, setup a TFTP server somewhere on your network and:<br><br>router> copy run tftp<br><br>Put in the TFTP server's IP and BOOM, text file. :)
Most companies make their CLIs propriatery, even though you might find similarities between two IOS's (ie Cisco and Bay Networks) they are greatly different. Unfortunately... wouldn't it be nice if they were the same? Wow, an actual standard! ;)
You might want to check the switch to determine wether or not it is allowing broadcasts on all ports, or at least the 2 you are using. I know Cisco switches will not (by default anyway) pass broadcasts on to all ports in the switch.<br><br>Try going into the config console on the...
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