Home » Cisco » 100-101 » Why was this message received?
Refer to the exhibit.
Why was this message received?
A. No VTY password has been set.
B. No enable password has been set.
C. No console password has been set.
D. No enable secret password has been set.
E. The login command has not been set on CON 0
F. The login command has not been set on the VTY ports.
Correct Answer: A
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
Your CCNA certification exam is likely going to contain questions about Telnet, an application-level protocol that allows remote communication between two networking devices. With Telnet use being as common as it is, you had better know the details of how to configure it in order to pass your CCNA exam and to work in real-world networks.
The basic concept is pretty simple – we want to configure R1, but we’re at R2. If we telnet successfully to R1, we will be able to configure R1 if we’ve been given the proper permission levels. In this CCNA case study, R2 has an IP address of 172.12.123.2 and R1 an address of 172.12.123.1. Let’s try to telnet from R2 to R1.
R2#telnet 172.12.123.1
Trying 172.12.123.1 … Open
Password required, but none set
[Connection to 172.12.123.1 closed by foreign host]
This seems like a problem, but it’s a problem we’re happy to have. A Cisco router will not let any user telnet to it by default. That’s a good thing, because we don’t want just anyone connecting to our router! The “password required” message means that no password has been set on the VTY lines on R1.
Let’s do so now.
R1(config)#line vty 0 4
R1(config-line)#password baseball
A password of “baseball” has been set on the VTY lines, so we shouldn’t have any trouble using Telnet to get from R2 to R1. Let’s try that now.
R2#telnet 172.12.123.1
Trying 172.12.123.1 … Open
User Access Verification
Password:
R1>
We’re in, and placed into user exec mode.
Reference: http://www.mcmcse.com/cisco/guides/telnet_passwords_and_privilege_levels.shtml
FULL Printable PDF and Software. VALID exam to help you pass.
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