Packet: Tracer 10.2.2.3
Cisco IOS requires you to globally enable the AAA subsystem. By default, it is often disabled. Command:
In previous labs, you likely used the username [name] privilege [level] secret [password] command.
To solve this lab effectively, you should use the following Cisco IOS commands:
Leo stripped the bad command and re-entered the correct one. Router(config-router)# network 192.168.3.0 0.0.0.255 area 0 Connectivity Restored He returned to his PC and typed ping 192.168.3.10 packet tracer 10.2.2.3
Assuming you have opened the 10.2.2.3.pka activity file, here is the exact methodology to achieve a 100% score.
The lab typically presents a broken OSPF environment where neighbor relationships (adjacencies) fail to form. You are expected to find and resolve:
After configuring, use these verification commands inside Packet Tracer's CLI: Cisco IOS requires you to globally enable the AAA subsystem
%OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 2.2.2.2 on Serial0/0/0 from LOADING to FULL. The adjacency was restored. The Final Obstacle But Chicago was still unreachable. Leo moved to R3. A quick revealed a classic blunder: the command had a typo in the Wildcard Mask
Your lab usually contains:
Decrements priority by 60 if Serial 0/0/0 fails, dropping R1 to 90 (below R3's 100). To solve this lab effectively, you should use
: Mismatched network types (e.g., one side set to Broadcast and the other to Point-to-Point).
Specifically, this activity focuses on the following key features and tasks: