Re: Core router bakeoff?
Not that I've done it, but you can use Kerberos to remotely manage a Cisco, giving you an encrypted telnet. In fact, does anyone have any pointers about how? Sam -----Original Message----- From: Selina Priestley <selina@ans.net> To: perry@piermont.com <perry@piermont.com> Cc: John A. Tamplin <jat@traveller.com>; Arnaud Girsch <agirsch@OASysGroup.com>; nanog@merit.edu <nanog@merit.edu> Date: Friday, May 08, 1998 8:55 PM Subject: Re: Core router bakeoff?
In short, unless you have numbers to indicate otherwise, I can't say that PCs cost you much, in the short term or the long term.
What Cisco's will buy you is better handling of T3s, SONET, etc., and the ability to handle much higher performance lines. They also have much better remote management facilities, in so far as the things have real serial consoles and such, which PCs don't.
Perry
One PC remote management win is that you can actually have secure encrypted access/authentication for remote management, rather than relying passwords in the clear and tftp. This is lacking in all router venders at this instant, far as I know.
Selina
Searching CCO for "encrypted telnet" gives: http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios112/krbtelnt.htm Like yourself, I've never used it, so I can't vouch for it. Scott At 10:24 PM 5/8/98 -0500, Sam Birch wrote:
Not that I've done it, but you can use Kerberos to remotely manage a Cisco, giving you an encrypted telnet. In fact, does anyone have any pointers about how?
Sam
---- Scott Whyte swhyte@cisco.com | Any opinions expressed herein are Network Supported Accounts (NSA) | mine and not cisco's... CCIE 3340 | "Eschew Obfuscation"
I helped test this about a year and a half ago. It works. - jared On Mon, May 11, 1998 at 09:23:48AM -0700, Scott Whyte wrote:
Searching CCO for "encrypted telnet" gives:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios112/krbtelnt.htm
Like yourself, I've never used it, so I can't vouch for it.
Scott
At 10:24 PM 5/8/98 -0500, Sam Birch wrote:
Not that I've done it, but you can use Kerberos to remotely manage a Cisco, giving you an encrypted telnet. In fact, does anyone have any pointers about how?
Sam
---- Scott Whyte swhyte@cisco.com | Any opinions expressed herein are Network Supported Accounts (NSA) | mine and not cisco's... CCIE 3340 | "Eschew Obfuscation"
-- Work: jared@qual.net - We Make The Internet Work for Your Business 9-5pm(ET) 800 637 4424x2634 - 24x7 NOC - 800 424 3223 pgp key available via finger from jared@puck.nether.net
participants (3)
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Jared Mauch
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Sam Birch
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Scott Whyte