Great Lab thanks for that! However you should be aware that for some people the ping will fail if you configure static route on R2 like this : ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 g0/1 but when you use this: ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.13.3 the ping will work. although both commands are correct. Maybe a packet tracer issue for some people ?!
@@JeremysITLab why in R1 is: ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.12.2 but not 192.168.3.1 255.255.255.0 192.168.12.2 ? the PC2 IP address is 192.168.3.1, not 192.168.3.0, can someone correct me please if I am wrong?
Brother you are a legend. My job just enrolled me into 5 day CCNA course worth 2 grand. They are not even giving me any study material or good quality labs. After class I look through your videos and labs to better understand everything. I cant express my gratitude more. Thank you so much.
I was working on it all and got it so the pings were bringing back a 50% loss rate. I was able to identify all of the errors on all of the routers. I also knew how to set up the routes but had no idea or had forgotten how to remove routes with the 'no' command. once I saw that part, I was able to correct everything easily and got it working. Thanks mr. Jeremy!
just found out you can also remove the configured route via Router's "Config" tab. Routing>Static>Network Address>Select and remove misconfigured route hehe.
At first I didn`t delete the wrong static routes and the results had me scratch my head for a while, but I only came back to the video once I`ve managed to figure it out. I`m glad you are giving us these tasks, it`s very helpful and I thank you!
I really wish I knew about this course a year ago! Your teaching method is the best! I found the config issues in no time and made the necessary changes and was able to ping from each pc. Thank you for what you do. I pray that God blesses you in abundance with everything that's good for you! Thank you, Jeremy! :)
IMO this was the best lab yet. Helped me to better understand the static ip routing. I was able to quickly find the issues and fix them correctly which just adds a ton of confidence!!!! Loving this course.
Hi Mr Jeremy, Just I started to watch the troubleshooting video, after you said try myself, I paused the video and and spot the errors which wrong configured in routers and changed the correct ip address and now able to ping from each pc. They are responding now. Really you are rocking man, how nicely you made everything to understand. We know all your hard work is behind that. Thanks a million man
Wow from zero to hero, i felt very excited after going through static routing clip only to realize i can do all by myself. Thank you so much Jeremy ,great work
Im currently taking Cisco CCNA classes in college for my degree and I have to say I got to what took me 3 months to get to in college in one week with your course. Its been incredible help and am very happy with your course and everything you provide! Will be forever thanking you when I pass my CCNA exam! Thank you for the great content
I hope you're enjoying the course! If you want another great set of FREE packet tracer labs for the CCNA, check out Neil Anderson's lab guide here: www.flackbox.com/cisco-ccna-lab-guide#jm1
i know im asking the wrong place but does anyone know a trick to log back into an Instagram account?? I was stupid forgot my login password. I would love any assistance you can offer me.
@Kole Emerson i really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm. Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
I did successfully troubleshoot day 11 lab 2 before i watch this video. Thanks J Sensei. Proud student here that I am learning through your videos. Keep it up!
I have completed this troubleshooting myself and some headache but finally did it. Great resource to practice and test our knowledge. After seeing the video I came to know you used pipe to filter things which is great. Thanks a lot.
Great videos Jeremy, Thank You! I am a current CCNA, but thought I would check this out for the new objectives coming up in February. You go above and beyond my friend. Just to note, I very rarely subscribe to anyone's UA-cam channels anymore, but had to subscribe to yours. Again, great videos, flash cards and Packet Tracer labs. Thanks for your time in putting this together!
@@JeremysITLab If you have time to create, compile, and put out the future videos, I can assure you I will find time to follow along with them. I will spread the word about your channel as well.
Your teaching method better than most of the Network engineer or professor in reality. First you could introduce the situation smoothly. Second you will trigger the mistake in casual way. Third you know how to hide the upper knowledge to give encourage newbie go on. I don't know do you have been learning how to teach before because even know the theory deep enough lots of professor still not make the change. You are awesome, hope you will have a more brighter career in the future. As a network bachelor, watch your video still make me learn a lot, thank you so much.
Following the instructions and your request, I did it without watching the video and it was a success. I did it twice and used the previous lab as a reference. First time I did it earlier today, it took me nearly an hour if not over an hour. Second time I did it and it took me 15 minutes and barely used the previous lab as a reference. I glanced at the routing table for each router the second time to understand the logic and I understood it immediately. That was fun to troubleshoot. Wonder if there are any other labs to practice on that. Very happy I accomplished this.
First video I got right without doing the lab while watching the video . I just insisted on finding how to remove the ip route and ip address using the “?” command ! feels so good 🙏 ! Jeremy is the best when it comes to explaining ! Better than all the teachers I had so far !
Thank you very much again for this video. In fact I added some works from myself in the previous lab video and when I came to this one I noticed that the questions in this video corresponded to my additional work in the previous video looool
I did Lab 11 pt 1 with the walkthrough and attempted pt 2 by myself. Granted I didn't follow the exact steps in this video but I was able to ping from PC1 to PC2 successfully! Jeremy you're amazing!
Thanks lots again Jeremy for all the effort you put in... I might be wrong but for those who were wondering I did not see a static route in R3 for the 192.168.1.0/24 network using "show ip route" but it does show up in the "show running-config | include ip route"
Very very good Course, clear and good to follow the TEacher, I´m teacher also with Telecommunications TEchonology, like Fixed and Mobile Networks, like 3,4,and 5G, and I´m very happy to Know a Teacher as Mr. and Master Jeremy..also Neil..GOD BLESED you to give you a Lot of Health and Energy to teacher the people in the World...like FREE CCNA course, I´m thanksfull, and Best Regards...
Thanks Jeremy for these detailed videos, they are very helpful in preparing for the CCNA exams, and also boost confidence in facing technical interviews. Cheers!
I followed the instructions here, and I've been having a good time using this course to study. For whatever reason, my instanc eof Packet Tracer didn't like routing to an interface instead of to an IP address. The ping always failed until I routed R2 to reach 3.0/24 on R3's IP address. Still I figured out how to do all that using all the instructions provided. Thank you so much!
Thank you Jeremy! I know you mentioned that the issues were with the routers but in my first trouble shooting steps I also checked the Static IP for PC 1 and the default gateway which was not set. So I used that for this lab along with the correct ip routes for the 3 rtrs and I was able to ping. I also had to set the IP address for PC 2 in the other notes. Thought that would be worth mentioning - in case I did something wrong.
So thankful for this course! I got my Net + a few weeks ago so a lot of this is a review for me. Anyway, I started my troubleshooting by running tracert on the PCs.
Woooow you made it look so easy. It took me an hour to figure this one out by myself. I ended up erasing startup config for all three routers and start again hahaha
Thank you! I really want to make more troubleshooting labs, I think they're really important (and fun to solve!). For now my plan is to go through all of the exam topics list, and then go back and create more troubleshooting labs when I've covered all of the topics. Glad you like it!
Easy, was able to figure it out super quick. Pressing up on the keyboard saves a lot of time when wanting to enter a previous command but don't want to actually enter it again.
I configured PC1's gateway to 1.245 since my self diagnosed dyslexia kicked in. I was beating my head in at the end of the video as to why I couple not ping PC3 from PC1. I tried pinging the gateway, which I could, tried a trace route to pc3 that would fail on the first hop, checked all the static routes I had set and they all looked correct. Finally, I decided to start the video again and realized my mistake. Great job on the video. I guess I need to slow down a bit and pay attention to details.
I tried doing the lab without the assistance of the video. And I had some hickups here and there but eventually got it. Most of my mistakes are carelessness of overseeing the issue, but it was quickly fixed. Learning from this lab of troubleshooting, I found myself doing a "show run" first. Doing a show run lets me oversees all the inputs the previous technician put. While you are viewing "show run", you can look at interfaces , check if the duplex auto is enabled, ip addresses, etc. After that depending on the situation you implement a "show ip route" or "show ip interface brief" to make it easier for you fix the issue. The reason for this is because those show commands will narrow down the information and you do not have to scroll up or down the "show run" command. I cannot tell whether if this is an efficient way of doing it, but I'll learn on the way as I progress through the videos.
When I did the lab for the first time myself, I found out all the errors but forgot the NO command and thought the new record will override the old record but apparently it won't. I even tried Remove or Delete to remove that error record😀. And it's good to know in the show run command the | can filter the information and only shows what you need to check. Great video!
I'm loving these training videos! Just wanted to comment that tracert would be a great way to see where the breaks start/are if you had no information about the configs. Just run c:>tracert from PC2 to PC1 ip address and it will show the next hops/breaks along the way. Hope everyone is doing well!
Hi Jeremy, thanks for doing these great videos! I have a question bc I don´t understood why here in min 5:26 the Giga0/0 is wrong and in the previous video you used 192.168.13.3 as the next hop. Is not the same? If anyone can answer, thanks!
G0/0 points toward R1, which is incorrect. To reach the 192.168.3.0/24 network, R2 must send the packet/frame out of its G0/1 interface to R3. So, you can configure the exit interface (G0/1) or the next hop (192.168.13.3), either will work.
@@JeremysITLab Thanks Jeremy, I´m reviewing topics for a tech supp rol, as soon as I landed the job I wil contribute you because this course is dope lol. Thank you so much!!
Took me forever! I finally realized that the configured route to PC2’s network on R2 using R2’s G0/1 exit interface was the issue, though I still can’t understand why. When I configure the route through R3’s G0/0 IP address the pings go right through. Anyone else? I’m hoping it’s a Packet Tracer issue.
First of all Jeremy thanks a lot for the series.Prior to this i was following the CCNA volume 1 and although it was also great but still i had some doubts which were clear from the videos.Also watching the videos is fun than reading through the lengthy syllabus.Also my ping is failing although i downloaded the troubleshooting lab from the link and followed the video.
Hello Sir, First of all, Thank you so much for teaching us the most complicated issues in a way that we understand. You are the most amazing teacher I have come across. Thank you :) My question is: at 5:22 is it ok to correct the misconfiguration by IP route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.13.3 instead of the interface g0/1 Thank you.
@@tseringlhamo9269 I had to make that change, once I did it started to work, any ideas on why it work with next hop rather than interface, in any case thanks for the videos Jeremy
Hi Jeremy great lab as usual, there is something I'd like to point out. On the Lab I had to configured the Static route from R3 to R1 since it was not configured per default as shown on the video, so in total there were two misconfigurations on R3 in my case. This is not a complaint by the way hahaha, just in case somebody else may encounter the same situation as I did.
Doing this by myself was torture because I didn't know how to delete the static routes and I confused myself with the exit interface. But it was good on all other accounts. Thanks so much for the lesson!
Great Lab thanks for that! However you should be aware that for some people the ping will fail if you configure static route on R2 like this : ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 g0/1 but when you use this: ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.13.3 the ping will work. although both commands are correct. Maybe a packet tracer issue for some people ?!
Same problem with me, good catch
Same here, ty
Wasted 20 minutes on this ffs
I spent an hour doing this lab wondering where I went wrong. Thanks for confirming I wasn't the only one having this issue.
Saved me.
I learned in 3 weeks what I couldn't understand at the university for 3 years.
Thanks!
I'm glad the videos are helpful ;)
Jesus that's exactly my thought here... couldn't explain it better.
Whole CCNA?
HaHa, me too.
@@JeremysITLab why in R1 is: ip route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.12.2 but not 192.168.3.1 255.255.255.0 192.168.12.2 ? the PC2 IP address is 192.168.3.1, not 192.168.3.0, can someone correct me please if I am wrong?
Brother you are a legend. My job just enrolled me into 5 day CCNA course worth 2 grand. They are not even giving me any study material or good quality labs. After class I look through your videos and labs to better understand everything.
I cant express my gratitude more.
Thank you so much.
They expect you to get CCNA in 5 days? I think the usual expectation is 3 months 😅
I was working on it all and got it so the pings were bringing back a 50% loss rate. I was able to identify all of the errors on all of the routers. I also knew how to set up the routes but had no idea or had forgotten how to remove routes with the 'no' command. once I saw that part, I was able to correct everything easily and got it working. Thanks mr. Jeremy!
I had the same issue lol, right after I saw how to remove the routes, I completed fixing the rest of the routers then got a successful ping!
load balancing 50% going from correct while 50% from incoreect
just found out you can also remove the configured route via Router's "Config" tab. Routing>Static>Network Address>Select and remove misconfigured route hehe.
@@cerillamarlou449 Oh that is a neat little trick for packet tracer for sure, TIL that we can do it that way as well via the GUI.
At first I didn`t delete the wrong static routes and the results had me scratch my head for a while, but I only came back to the video once I`ve managed to figure it out. I`m glad you are giving us these tasks, it`s very helpful and I thank you!
Well done!
Same thing here. I Googled it like how to remove static routes on packet tracer 😂
Jeremy, I can’t thank you enough for all your work and all the free teaching you are offering.
I second this. Thank you for helping my get started on my CCNA! @Jeremy rules!
Thank U for your outstanding job with these 21 videos !!!
Looking forward to the rest covering the CCNA syllabus .
Deeply appreciated !!!
Thank you for your comment :)
I really wish I knew about this course a year ago! Your teaching method is the best! I found the config issues in no time and made the necessary changes and was able to ping from each pc. Thank you for what you do. I pray that God blesses you in abundance with everything that's good for you! Thank you, Jeremy! :)
IMO this was the best lab yet. Helped me to better understand the static ip routing. I was able to quickly find the issues and fix them correctly which just adds a ton of confidence!!!! Loving this course.
Hi Mr Jeremy, Just I started to watch the troubleshooting video, after you said try myself, I paused the video and and spot the errors which wrong configured in routers and changed the correct ip address and now able to ping from each pc. They are responding now. Really you are rocking man, how nicely you made everything to understand. We know all your hard work is behind that. Thanks a million man
Well done! It's always satisfying to solve it yourself :)
Wow from zero to hero, i felt very excited after going through static routing clip only to realize i can do all by myself. Thank you so much Jeremy ,great work
Best teacher ever!! I learned nothing from college but learn a lot from all of your videos. Thank you, Jeremy!
Thank you :)
BROOO this guy is the GOAT of all GOATs
Your teaching in detail is the best! keep it up good work and thank you for this course
Thank you!
Im currently taking Cisco CCNA classes in college for my degree and I have to say I got to what took me 3 months to get to in college in one week with your course. Its been incredible help and am very happy with your course and everything you provide! Will be forever thanking you when I pass my CCNA exam! Thank you for the great content
I hope you're enjoying the course! If you want another great set of FREE packet tracer labs for the CCNA, check out Neil Anderson's lab guide here: www.flackbox.com/cisco-ccna-lab-guide#jm1
i know im asking the wrong place but does anyone know a trick to log back into an Instagram account??
I was stupid forgot my login password. I would love any assistance you can offer me.
@Wayne Miller instablaster =)
@Kole Emerson i really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm.
Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Kole Emerson It worked and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thanks so much, you saved my ass !
@Wayne Miller you are welcome =)
Yaay! I managed to troubleshoot before watching the video *happy dance* You are honestly the best teacher I have ever had, Jeremy. Thanks so much.
Congrats! I know that feeling, troubleshooting is fun!
I did successfully troubleshoot day 11 lab 2 before i watch this video. Thanks J Sensei. Proud student here that I am learning through your videos. Keep it up!
Awesome, well done!
I have completed this troubleshooting myself and some headache but finally did it. Great resource to practice and test our knowledge.
After seeing the video I came to know you used pipe to filter things which is great.
Thanks a lot.
same here ahahah. I thought that's only useful when dealing with linux bash
Great videos Jeremy, Thank You! I am a current CCNA, but thought I would check this out for the new objectives coming up in February. You go above and beyond my friend. Just to note, I very rarely subscribe to anyone's UA-cam channels anymore, but had to subscribe to yours. Again, great videos, flash cards and Packet Tracer labs. Thanks for your time in putting this together!
Thanks for the great comment! Hope you follow along with future videos.
@@JeremysITLab If you have time to create, compile, and put out the future videos, I can assure you I will find time to follow along with them. I will spread the word about your channel as well.
Your teaching method better than most of the Network engineer or professor in reality.
First you could introduce the situation smoothly.
Second you will trigger the mistake in casual way.
Third you know how to hide the upper knowledge to give encourage newbie go on.
I don't know do you have been learning how to teach before because even know the theory deep enough lots of professor still not make the change.
You are awesome, hope you will have a more brighter career in the future.
As a network bachelor, watch your video still make me learn a lot, thank you so much.
Thank you so much for your kind comment, I really appreciate it :)
Following the instructions and your request, I did it without watching the video and it was a success. I did it twice and used the previous lab as a reference. First time I did it earlier today, it took me nearly an hour if not over an hour. Second time I did it and it took me 15 minutes and barely used the previous lab as a reference. I glanced at the routing table for each router the second time to understand the logic and I understood it immediately.
That was fun to troubleshoot. Wonder if there are any other labs to practice on that. Very happy I accomplished this.
letssssss go, got this lab figured out by myself!! A couple weeks ago I had no idea what any of this meant, thanks Jeremy!!
Love your labs Jeremy, love you too! Thanks Jeremy!
Me who already found the misconfigurations but don't know how to configure them;
Jeremy: just watch and learn.
First video I got right without doing the lab while watching the video . I just insisted on finding how to remove the ip route and ip address using the “?” command ! feels so good 🙏 ! Jeremy is the best when it comes to explaining ! Better than all the teachers I had so far !
I'm happy, I managed to fix it without seeing the video! Thanks!!
Awesome! Well done
Day 11 Lab 2 was awesome! Thank you Jeremy!
Thank you very much again for this video. In fact I added some works from myself in the previous lab video and when I came to this one I noticed that the questions in this video corresponded to my additional work in the previous video looool
I am so jubilant! I actually did the troubleshooting myself and pinged successfully. Thank you, Jeremy!
I did Lab 11 pt 1 with the walkthrough and attempted pt 2 by myself. Granted I didn't follow the exact steps in this video but I was able to ping from PC1 to PC2 successfully! Jeremy you're amazing!
Thanks lots again Jeremy for all the effort you put in... I might be wrong but for those who were wondering I did not see a static route in R3 for the 192.168.1.0/24 network using "show ip route" but it does show up in the "show running-config | include ip route"
Very very good Course, clear and good to follow the TEacher, I´m teacher also with Telecommunications TEchonology, like Fixed and Mobile Networks, like 3,4,and 5G, and I´m very happy to Know a Teacher as Mr. and Master Jeremy..also Neil..GOD BLESED you to give you a Lot of Health and Energy to teacher the people in the World...like FREE CCNA course, I´m thanksfull, and Best Regards...
Jeremy you deserve the best coz your videos are the best i have ever come across via internet...
you made me love networking
Thanks for your help
History will Always remember that Jeremy is the GOD of simple and smooth teaching.
These lectures and labs are incredibly helpful and so easy to understand. Sent you some litecoin, keep it up Jeremy!
Thank you!
Thanks Jeremy for these detailed videos, they are very helpful in preparing for the CCNA exams, and also boost confidence in facing technical interviews. Cheers!
I followed the instructions here, and I've been having a good time using this course to study. For whatever reason, my instanc eof Packet Tracer didn't like routing to an interface instead of to an IP address. The ping always failed until I routed R2 to reach 3.0/24 on R3's IP address. Still I figured out how to do all that using all the instructions provided. Thank you so much!
Same thing happened to me, thanks for leaving a great insight! :)
My favorite lab so far!
These videos are so helpful!!!! Thank you for your time and patience ! I am learning to love the packet tracers .
Thanks alot Jeremy for the videos may God bless you ... looking forward too learn complete ccna course . Eagerly waiting for the videos
Thank you sir, I will continue making them!
Great job Jeremy, keep up the good work.
I used to sincerly hate packet tracer, now i love it thank you man, if you ever come to switzerland i owe you a beer !
Thanks Anthony, I'll remember that ;)
That was a great lab! Thanks a lot! I was able to figure out some of it, but I've got to take a break and try again.
Thank you!
Hi jeremy. Really enjoyed and loved this troubleshooting video. Please include more of troubleshooting labs and videos, if possible. Thanks.
Thank you Jeremy! I know you mentioned that the issues were with the routers but in my first trouble shooting steps I also checked the Static IP for PC 1 and the default gateway which was not set. So I used that for this lab along with the correct ip routes for the 3 rtrs and I was able to ping. I also had to set the IP address for PC 2 in the other notes. Thought that would be worth mentioning - in case I did something wrong.
i did it on my own, im so proud :DDDD, thank you jeremy you are the greatest teacher ever!
So thankful for this course! I got my Net + a few weeks ago so a lot of this is a review for me. Anyway, I started my troubleshooting by running tracert on the PCs.
Wow, I am infra admin for so many years, but learning a lot from your videos
Wow, I'm glad to hear that :)
Woooow you made it look so easy. It took me an hour to figure this one out by myself. I ended up erasing startup config for all three routers and start again hahaha
Haha definitely don't do that in a real network!
@@JeremysITLab Lmao
Completed both day 11 labs on my own. Confidence growing... 💪
Jeremy, I made mistakes when inputting some of the routes in R2; I could not see what I did until 6.32 of this video! Thank you again!!
Nice! 👍
I spotted the issues but wasn't aware of the "no" before ip route. Thank you!!
I configure it without looking to your videos. Your teaching are awesome. Thank you!
Well done! Thanks Takuya.
I love the series so far. I am on day 13 and am looking forward to completing this course. Commenting this on every video for the algorithm.
Awesome!!! More labs, more troubleshooting tasks :) Thumb up!
Thank you! I really want to make more troubleshooting labs, I think they're really important (and fun to solve!). For now my plan is to go through all of the exam topics list, and then go back and create more troubleshooting labs when I've covered all of the topics. Glad you like it!
@@JeremysITLab Thank you. I definitely will watch the whole course
Easy, was able to figure it out super quick. Pressing up on the keyboard saves a lot of time when wanting to enter a previous command but don't want to actually enter it again.
Amazing work. Learning so much faster and with a better understanding than with my school's materials/Testout stuff. Thank you!
I configured PC1's gateway to 1.245 since my self diagnosed dyslexia kicked in. I was beating my head in at the end of the video as to why I couple not ping PC3 from PC1. I tried pinging the gateway, which I could, tried a trace route to pc3 that would fail on the first hop, checked all the static routes I had set and they all looked correct. Finally, I decided to start the video again and realized my mistake. Great job on the video. I guess I need to slow down a bit and pay attention to details.
Yeah definitely take your time! Small mistakes like typos are very common
Love it, solving problems is my favorite part of this job)
you can also use simulation mode to see where the ping packet is not forwarding to ease the CLI step
Thanks Jeremy! You are a great instructor!
Thanks J J :)
I tried doing the lab without the assistance of the video. And I had some hickups here and there but eventually got it. Most of my mistakes are carelessness of overseeing the issue, but it was quickly fixed. Learning from this lab of troubleshooting, I found myself doing a "show run" first. Doing a show run lets me oversees all the inputs the previous technician put. While you are viewing "show run", you can look at interfaces , check if the duplex auto is enabled, ip addresses, etc. After that depending on the situation you implement a "show ip route" or "show ip interface brief" to make it easier for you fix the issue. The reason for this is because those show commands will narrow down the information and you do not have to scroll up or down the "show run" command. I cannot tell whether if this is an efficient way of doing it, but I'll learn on the way as I progress through the videos.
When I did the lab for the first time myself, I found out all the errors but forgot the NO command and thought the new record will override the old record but apparently it won't. I even tried Remove or Delete to remove that error record😀. And it's good to know in the show run command the | can filter the information and only shows what you need to check. Great video!
Lessons are great. Succeeded in troubleshooting on first try
Awesome, well done!
I'm loving these training videos! Just wanted to comment that tracert would be a great way to see where the breaks start/are if you had no information about the configs. Just run c:>tracert from PC2 to PC1 ip address and it will show the next hops/breaks along the way. Hope everyone is doing well!
I've done the lab by myself. Thanks Jeremy for your wonderful explanations.
😄
Wow! Jeremy, I took your advise and did troubleshooting before watching the video and guess what? I did it. Thanks, a lot!
You have made my day. Ping successfully :)
Hi Jeremy, thanks for doing these great videos! I have a question bc I don´t understood why here in min 5:26 the Giga0/0 is wrong and in the previous video you used 192.168.13.3 as the next hop. Is not the same? If anyone can answer, thanks!
G0/0 points toward R1, which is incorrect. To reach the 192.168.3.0/24 network, R2 must send the packet/frame out of its G0/1 interface to R3.
So, you can configure the exit interface (G0/1) or the next hop (192.168.13.3), either will work.
@@JeremysITLab Thanks Jeremy, I´m reviewing topics for a tech supp rol, as soon as I landed the job I wil contribute you because this course is dope lol. Thank you so much!!
It fixed after changing to ip address instead of interface. it might be packet tracer problem
@@mkahraman82 Ty happens to me as well! Must be a packet tracer problem indeed!
That feeling I got when I pinged PC2 successfully was amazing.
I did it before watching the vid, best course ever
Excellent lab Jeremy, thank you for your work it is much appreciated
Took me forever! I finally realized that the configured route to PC2’s network on R2 using R2’s G0/1 exit interface was the issue, though I still can’t understand why. When I configure the route through R3’s G0/0 IP address the pings go right through. Anyone else? I’m hoping it’s a Packet Tracer issue.
First of all Jeremy thanks a lot for the series.Prior to this i was following the CCNA volume 1 and although it was also great but still i had some doubts which were clear from the videos.Also watching the videos is fun than reading through the lengthy syllabus.Also my ping is failing although i downloaded the troubleshooting lab from the link and followed the video.
Did you fix the configuration exactly as I did in the video?
@@JeremysITLab yes i did exactly as shown in the video
I got about 90% of it correct without peeking at the answer. awesome lab!
Thank you for your hardwork. Now I'm more confident in my networking skills. Once again Thank you so much Brother
This lab mad the previous video much much more easier to understand
I'm glad it was helpful :)
Hello Sir, First of all, Thank you so much for teaching us the most complicated issues in a way that we understand. You are the most amazing teacher I have come across. Thank you :) My question is: at 5:22 is it ok to correct the misconfiguration by IP route 192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.13.3 instead of the interface g0/1 Thank you.
Yes, that's fine too! If the PCs can ping each other, it's no problem.
@@JeremysITLab Thank you 👍
@@tseringlhamo9269 I had to make that change, once I did it started to work, any ideas on why it work with next hop rather than interface, in any case thanks for the videos Jeremy
Thanks, Jeremy. Amazing work.
Thanks alot for your hard work Jeremy. Really appreciated.
Thanks for watching and commenting :)
Thanks, this lab is the coolest so far! Great learning format - I had a lot of fun solving the problems :)
Thanks, glad you liked it! Troubleshooting is fun and great practice. I plan to add more troubleshooting labs after the course is finished.
Thank you so much Jeremy
This helped a lot, Thanks !!
absolutely fantastic, got it.
Thank you, glad to hear it :)
thanks for the videos, really enlightening,great in depth explanation. But how about the dynamic Routing Protocols? like the IGP and EGPs?
Thanks! I've only covered about 50% of the exam topics so far.
love your videos
@6:30 if you were using Ip address instead of interface which Ip address were you gonna use?
I would use 192.168.13.3, because that's the next hop (next router) to the destination.
Thank you Jeremy, helpful videos
Thank you Frank!
got me with R2. Awesome lab.
Hi Jeremy great lab as usual, there is something I'd like to point out. On the Lab I had to configured the Static route from R3 to R1 since it was not configured per default as shown on the video, so in total there were two misconfigurations on R3 in my case. This is not a complaint by the way hahaha, just in case somebody else may encounter the same situation as I did.
You are the great, thank you so much for this series of videos
Thank you Jeremy
Thanks for watching :)
impressive work man.go on
Thank you again !!!
Fantastic lab, keep it up bro and you are the best, thank you 🙏
Thanks Mahmoud!
Liked every video! Thanks a lot!
Thanks for the likes :)
This was a fun lab to do! Great work!
Doing this by myself was torture because I didn't know how to delete the static routes and I confused myself with the exit interface. But it was good on all other accounts. Thanks so much for the lesson!
Thank you! great video!