Thanks Bruno,

The wording is wrong. The answer makes complete sense.

Pretty complicated lab design. I am wondering if someone has it in real 
production environment...........:)

I guess the hardship of the lab will make you perfect.


Best Regards.
______________________
Adil 

On Aug 6, 2011, at 8:26 AM, Bruno wrote:

> I like lab17. It shows how crazy our bud Tyson is :)
> 
> In summary, 192.168.5.21 will be the ACS. You'll end up with 2 NATs for ACS, 
> ASA1 will have .21 and .100 where .100 translates to 10.1.1.100 directly and 
> .21 translates to DMZ 192.168.5.21 and then translates to 10.1.1.100 on ASA2
> 
> The wording can be wrong, but answer is right
> 
> On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 2:00 AM, Adil Pasha <[email protected]> wrote:
> Guys,
> I am trying IPX Lab 17 tonight.
> 
> Q 1.3 Says: On ASA2 192.168.5.21 should be translated to 10.1.1.100
> 
> Ans 1.3: static (inside,outside) 192.168.5.21 10.1.1.100
> 
> Is there a typo?
> 
> Or am I not clear about the question. I hope I am wrong.
> 
> Based on the question I would do:
> static (outside,inside) 10.1.1.1 192.168.5.21
> Just because it says 192.168.5.21 should be translated to 10.1.1.100. On the 
> drawing 192.168.5.21 is on the outside of the ASA2 and 10.1.1.100 is on the 
> inside network.
> 
> Could someone please tell me why the solutions guide has the above answer 
> different then my answer?
> 
> 
> Best Regards.
> ______________________
> Adil
> 
> _______________________________________________
> For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please 
> visit www.ipexpert.com
> 
> Are you a CCNP or CCIE and looking for a job? Check out 
> www.PlatinumPlacement.com
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Bruno Fagioli
> Cisco Security Professional

_______________________________________________
For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please visit 
www.ipexpert.com

Are you a CCNP or CCIE and looking for a job? Check out 
www.PlatinumPlacement.com

Reply via email to