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 J NCI A Lab Manual


Developed by
 Mr. K hiem Bui
 Mr. H an Nguyen
 Ms. Loc Nguyen

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Day 3:

ROUTING FUNDAMENTALS
- Routing Fundamentals:

By completing this lab, you will perform the following tasks:

  Configure and verify proper operation of network interfaces.


  Configure and monitor static routing
  Configure and monitor OSPF.

In this part you will configure the device hostnames, root password, the
management network interface details including definition of specific services
allowed for accessing the device.

+ Configure root password on every device with the value of


labmentor123.

+ Based on the topology diagram configure the management and loopback


interfaces on each device with the IP address as listed in the table below:

Device Management IP Loopback IP WAN address


R1 192.168.1.10/24 192.168.1.100/24 15.0.0.1/24
R2 10.1.42.10/24 10.1.42.100/24 15.0.0.2/24

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

+ The management interface on each device needs to be used purely only


for management access and won’t accept any transit traffic. In addition this
interface will accept only specific services as defined in the table below

Device Hostname
R1 (SRX) ssh with allowed root access, telnet, http, https
R2 (SRX) ssh with allowed root access, telnet, http, https

Login as user root with the password labmentor123:

Issue the show route command to display the contents of the route table:

root@R1> show route

root@R1> show route all

Issue the show interfaces terse command to verify the current state of the
recently configured interfaces:

root@R1> show interfaces terse

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

This case we will changes Fe_0/0/0 = em0, Se_0/0/2 = em1.

Enter configuration mode and navigate to the [ edit interfaces ] hierarchy level:

root@R1> configure

root@R1# edit interfaces

root@R1# set lo0 unit 0 family inet address 192.168.1.100/24

root@R1# set em0 unit 0 family inet address 192.168.1.10/24

root@R1# set em1 unit 0 family inet address 15.0.0.1/24

root@R1# commit

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Issue the show interfaces terse command to verify the current state of the


recently configured interfaces:

root@R1# run show interfaces terse

The configured interfaces should all show Admin and Link states of up, as show
in the previous output. If the configured interfaces are in the down state, contact
your instructor (Khiem Bui).

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Issue the show route command to view the current route entries:

root@R1# run show route

Note:

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Now We use the ping utility to verify reachability to the neighboring devices
connect to your device:

root@R2# run ping 192.168.1.10

What does the result from the ping?

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Configure the Static route on the Router R1:

root@R1# set routing-option static route 10.1.42.0/24 next-hop 15.0.0.2

roo@R1# commit

Configure the Static route on the Router R2:

root@R2# set routing-option static route 192.168.1.0/24 next-hop 15.0.0.1

roo@R2# commit

Verifying command:

root@R1# run ping 10.1.42.100

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

root@R1# run show route

root@R1# run show route protocol static

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

root@R1# run show configuration

root@R1# run show interfaces terse

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

- Configure and monitor OSPF

In this part, you will configure and monitor OSPF. You will configure a single
OSPF area based on the network diagram for this lab. Finally, you will perform
some verification tasks to that OSPF work properly.

In this part you will configure the device hostnames, root password, the
management network interface details including definition of specific services
allowed for accessing the device.

+ Configure root password on every device with the value of


labmentor123.

+ Based on the topology diagram configure the management and loopback


interfaces on each device with the IP address as listed in the table below:

Device Management IP Loopback IP WAN address


R1 192.168.1.10/24 192.168.1.100/24 15.0.0.1/24
R2 10.1.42.10/24 10.1.42.100/24 15.0.0.2/24

This case we will changes Fe_0/0/0 = em0, Se_0/0/2 = em1.

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Enter configuration mode and navigate to the [edit protocols ospf ] hierarchy
level:

root@R1> configure

root@R1# edit protocols ospf

Define OSPF area 0 and include all internal interfaces that connect to the remote
team’s device and the directly connected virtual router:

root@R1# set area 0 interface em0

root@R1# set area 0 interface em1

root@R1# set area 0 interface lo0

root@R1# show

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

root@R2# set area 0 interface em0

root@R2# set area 0 interface em1

root@R2# set area 0 interface lo0

root@R2# show

 Activate the candidate configuration using the commit command:

root@R1# commit

Issue the run show ospf neighbor  command to veriry OSPF neighbor


adjacency state information:

root@R1# run show ospf neighbor

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

root@R2# run show ospf neighbor

If you do not see this state after several minutes, check with the remote team and
with your instructor, if need. Good luck

Issue the run show route protocols ospf  to view the active OSPF routes in
your device’s route table:

root@R1# run show route protocols ospf

root@R2# run show route protocols ospf

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Delete all static routes used for internal connectivity:

root@R2# top edit routing-options

root@R2# show

root@R2# delete static route 192.168.1.0/24

root@R2# show

root@R2# commit and-quit

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Now, activate the configuration and return to operational mode. Issue the show
route protocol ospf  command to verify that the OSPF routes are now active:

Ping all internal devices to verify reachability through the OSPF router:

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR
 

Do the ping tests succeed?

http: // w w w . L a b M e n t o r . o r g LABMENTOR

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