I used PIX in GNS3 for my lab preparation and was able to create trunks between 
PIX and the switch.

Just remember one point. PIX does not support NTP and therefore if you are 
doing YB Lab 1 you will not be able to create IPSec l2l tunnels between router 
and PIX using digital certs. 

Good luck.


Best Regards.
______________________
Adil 

On Jun 10, 2011, at 5:58 PM, Travis Niedens wrote:

> So far my usage has been great (with the right images of course). It was a 
> nightmare before getting the right software to do the trick. GNS works fine 
> for the routers and it appears that the qemu / ASAs are working well now as 
> well. I have labbed active/active failover without any issue, I just want to 
> use trunks / subinterfaces as I do have prior lab experiences that dictate 
> this is good to know J.  I was just wanting to know if the net udp transport 
> method was stable enough and capable of handling dot1q frames.
>  
> Travis
>  
> From: Adil Pasha [mailto:[email protected]] 
> Sent: Friday, June 10, 2011 2:46 PM
> To: Travis Niedens
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_Security] QEMU and Trunk interfaces
>  
> If you are studying for CCIE lab then my honest suggestion is to get on the 
> real equipment and save yourselves a lot of time. I know real equipment will 
> turn out more expensive but time is very import and you will not be 
> distracted by GNS3 issues. I ran into many funky GNS3 issues and wasted lots 
> of time and GNS3 was not part of CCIE lab.......:)
>  
> 
> Best Regards.
> ______________________
> Adil 
>  
> On Jun 10, 2011, at 4:02 PM, Travis Niedens wrote:
> 
> 
> I am trying to lab ASAs working within an environment right now. I have the 
> ASAs working with QEMU and the non-trunk interfaces work fine. I was 
> wondering if anyone has been able to configure interfaces that can be used 
> for trunking with the –net udp approach for providing connectivity to the 
> rest of the network in GNS/Dynamips & QEMU. Example current string:
>  
> C:\..>qemu.exe -L . -hda asa1.img -m 256 -net 
> nic,vlan=1,model=pcnet,macaddr=00:aa:00:00:01:01 -net 
> udp,vlan=1,sport=30001,dport=20001,daddr=127.0.0.1 -net 
> nic,vlan=2,model=pcnet,macaddr=00:aa:00:00:01:02 -net 
> udp,vlan=2,sport=30002,dport=20002,daddr=127.0.0.1 -net 
> nic,vlan=7,model=pcnet,macaddr=00:aa:00:00:01:03 -net 
> udp,vlan=7,sport=30003,dport=20003,daddr=127.0.0.1 -net 
> nic,vlan=4,model=pcnet,macaddr=00:aa:00:00:01:04 -net udp,vlan
> =4,sport=30004,dport=20004,daddr=127.0.0.1 -serial 
> telnet:127.0.0.1:2666,server
>  
> This would be to simulate trunk interfaces to ASAs so that subinterfaces, 
> like Ethernet 0/0.150, can be assigned to contexts.
>  
> Thanks,
> Travis
> _______________________________________________
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>  

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