That;s the page I ment to :)

Tommaso Di Donato wrote:
To retrieve a Cisco router password, you only need to access the console! It is so easy, and you do not loose anything. You unly need to change the registry value:
Here something that will help you:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps1831/products_tech_note09186a00801746e6.shtml

On 2/18/06, Abyss - 1 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ok as for the password recovery there is a "easy" an non config deleting way.

On the cisco page there is a section for password recovery it outlines all the staps needed to recover the password without deleting the configuration !
You will need console access to the router though I have used it from 800 series till 10000 series routers so I know it works :)

I will post the link later on I have to grab my laptop for it ;)


J.


Kim C. Callis wrote:
Here is the problem in a nutshell... The Cisco was bought
and they had someone configure the Cisco. There was a
falling out, and the guy bailed without giving the enable
password on the Cisco.

Although I could crack the password, all of the methods that

I know usually blow away the configuration. And for whatever
reason, they (the ISP) can get the configuration from the
T-1 provider (probably because they have been lax in paying
the bill).

I agree that it would probably be better to use the cisco to

handle the routing, but unless someone can tell me how to
crack the enable password, that is not an option.

K.


On Sat, Feb 18, 2006 at 09:24:59PM +0100, Abyss - 1 wrote:
  
I guess you need Zebra then or gated dont know the one you are talking 
about.

But what kind of routing issues are you getting from the link from the 
ISP as there might be a better solution resolved within the cisco as the 

Linux routing packages are notoriously instable and unreliable.

I work allot with checkpoint firewalls at work and they have the zebra 
and gated solutions (depending on the version) and there are major 

issues with the dynamic routing on those.

J.

Kim C. Callis wrote:
    
My issue is that my pfsense box is connected to a Cisco
router which is acting as a bridge to connect to ISP. I am
constantly running into problems with the way the ISP
routes.

If I were to install quagga on to the pfsense box, would the

box actually handle the routing through RIP and dymanically
change the routing tables thus bypassing the problems on the
ISP side or is that wasted effort on my part?

K.


On Sat, Feb 18, 2006 at 02:50:35PM -0500, Scott Ullrich wrote:

 
      
There no GUIS for them and the packages never worked properly.   It is
possible to manually pkg_add -r quagga still.

On 2/18/06, Kim C. Callis 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
   
        
I believe that once upon a time, one of the packages that
was available was zebra/quagga. Has that package been
removed or was that a figment of my imagination?

K.


     
          
              
 
      
  



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