On 23/02/2009 23:51, Tom Storey wrote:
Erm, what does that have to do with DNS lookups? :-)
Nothing at all, except that it stops this behaviour:
... when you have no DNS
servers configured and mistype "configt", or some other command that
doesnt exist and it tries to resolve it through broadc
> 'No ip domain lookup' will solve your problem instance below. Eg dns
True, but only really useful until you configure the device and it can
reach a DNS server, at which point you lose the ability to resolve any
hostname, but would be very handy in a lab where DNS is never likely to
exist I must
Erm, what does that have to do with DNS lookups? :-)
> line con 0
> transport preferred none
> line vty 0 15
> transport preferred none
>
> Nick
>
'No ip domain lookup' will solve your problem instance below. Eg dns resolution
attempt on typos.
-Original Message-
From: "Tom Storey"
Date: Tue, 24 Feb 2009 09:32:28
To: Bruce Grobler
Cc:
Subject: RE: FW: Ctrl+Shift+6 then X
FWIW Ive rarely had a problem
On 23/02/2009 23:02, Tom Storey wrote:
Though the only thing it doesnt seem to help with is when you have no DNS
servers configured and mistype "configt", or some other command that
doesnt exist and it tries to resolve it through broadcast several times.
Ive found its futile to try and get out of
10:48 AM
> To: nanog@nanog.org >> nanog
> Subject: Re: FW: Ctrl+Shift+6 then X
>
> Bruce,
>
> I have that problem using any terminal program (I use SecureCRT).. I have
> to
> bang the command like 10-20 times for the device to recognize it. Kind of
> wished
> CTR
Just configure a different escape character with "terminal escape x". For
example, "term esc 3" will make Ctrl/C the escape character (and Ctrl/C+X
the escape sequence). Ctrl/^ is "somewhat" hard to get on "some" terminal
emulators :)
Ivan
> > If anyone can tell me how to resolve this issue there
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 3:48 AM, Shon Elliott wrote:
> I have that problem using any terminal program (I use SecureCRT).. I have to
> bang the command like 10-20 times for the device to recognize it. Kind of
> wished
> CTRL-C or something worked better and actually worked well.
I usually change
>> nanog
Subject: Re: FW: Ctrl+Shift+6 then X
Bruce,
I have that problem using any terminal program (I use SecureCRT).. I have to
bang the command like 10-20 times for the device to recognize it. Kind of
wished
CTRL-C or something worked better and actually worked well.
Shon Elliott
Senior N
Bruce,
I have that problem using any terminal program (I use SecureCRT).. I have to
bang the command like 10-20 times for the device to recognize it. Kind of wished
CTRL-C or something worked better and actually worked well.
Shon Elliott
Senior Network Engineer
unWired Broadband, Inc.
Bruce G
Re Bruce,
br...@yoafrica.com (Bruce Grobler) wrote:
> Using Putty or any other ssh/telnet terminal I find that Ctrl+Shift+6 then X
> (on a cisco) works only sometimes after beating your keyboard multiple times
> with a hammer, has anyone else come across or had a solution to this problem
> ?
I
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