I am blown away by the fact that you can show the config in JSON or XML. Why in the world are we still using's Cisco's crappy syntax? That is amazing. I've been using Cisco for 4-5 years, trying to automate it with Ansible and python the last 2 years, struggling with parsing plain text output and stuff. If I had been using Juniper this whole time I could have saved literally hours of time.
Your passion and energy transcend the monitor and motivated me back in spring to pursue the ENCOR and ENARSI exams this year. On 12 December i'm glad to say that the goal was completed and i'd like to thank you for the great content you upload. This clip comes so fit to me since I set as personal goals for 2021 to take certification exams on both Juniper and the DevNet track from Cisco. Thank you again and i wish you happy hollydays.
I recently did the JNCIP-ENT, and I just want to say I appreciate you and the advice you spread at 8:53. This is EXACTLY why my love for certs has died. Even if you have the legitimate resources and labs, there is still stuff that is just like "You LITERALLY never mentioned this ever". I get you have to read a bit more about a topic and I get the pass mark is "low" compared to other vendors, but it's still really frustrating, because essentially what you're saying is "we're putting questions in here that you should never be able to pass", which hardly combats the other issue (people dumping everything). If it were something that one could work out from one's base knowledge, then fair enough... Anyway, back to the rest of the video, great point made for future test takers though - just learn at least what every command does.
@dataknox broo I'm really happy I just passed the JNCIS-SP exam, and I really want to thank you, since some of my knowledge was based on your training videos 👍 thanks for teach and share your experiences and knowledge with others engineers
I passed my JNCIA-Junos not too long ago (a week before they removed the free vouchers). Junos is weird, but I kind of see a few things that make sense after coming from IOS. Commit confirmed (or how to not accidentally lock yourself out) is one nice feature that already exists on IOS apparently. Going back to the exam topics, getting hit with BGP (beyond the coverage of the CCNA RS) and ISIS (which isn't even touched outside of CCNx SP) is just mean, for an associate level exam. The Junos Genius modules were, IMO, insufficient for the exam and had many errors (beyond typos) AND assumes prior exp/knowledge which the CCNA (RS) just so happens to cover. Something not covered in the vid is "how" to get the images, which is surprisingly easy (AND FREE) compared to Cisco. Just created an account and asked for access to eval images (going through JTAC is actually covered in the exam) for study purposes, and a day later, they confirmed it (and even CALLED to verify I had access, which was surprising). Labbing with vMX (especially with vSRX) is significantly more resource (cpu/ram) hungry than IOS, which I learned the hard way. Again, thanks for your insights. I see the lockdown beard is here to stay. The next few months for me are filled with grind (thanks Microsoft and Palo Alto for your free exam vouchers).
So learning JNCIS requires you to learn also the more advanced level other than that you are currently studying, just like preparing for CCNA but also need to learn CCNP...🤔
I am blown away by the fact that you can show the config in JSON or XML. Why in the world are we still using's Cisco's crappy syntax? That is amazing. I've been using Cisco for 4-5 years, trying to automate it with Ansible and python the last 2 years, struggling with parsing plain text output and stuff. If I had been using Juniper this whole time I could have saved literally hours of time.
Your passion and energy transcend the monitor and motivated me back in spring to pursue the ENCOR and ENARSI exams this year. On 12 December i'm glad to say that the goal was completed and i'd like to thank you for the great content you upload.
This clip comes so fit to me since I set as personal goals for 2021 to take certification exams on both Juniper and the DevNet track from Cisco.
Thank you again and i wish you happy hollydays.
Thank you for those kind words 🙏🙏
I recently did the JNCIP-ENT, and I just want to say I appreciate you and the advice you spread at 8:53. This is EXACTLY why my love for certs has died. Even if you have the legitimate resources and labs, there is still stuff that is just like "You LITERALLY never mentioned this ever". I get you have to read a bit more about a topic and I get the pass mark is "low" compared to other vendors, but it's still really frustrating, because essentially what you're saying is "we're putting questions in here that you should never be able to pass", which hardly combats the other issue (people dumping everything). If it were something that one could work out from one's base knowledge, then fair enough...
Anyway, back to the rest of the video, great point made for future test takers though - just learn at least what every command does.
@dataknox broo I'm really happy I just passed the JNCIS-SP exam, and I really want to thank you, since some of my knowledge was based on your training videos 👍 thanks for teach and share your experiences and knowledge with others engineers
Congratulations! Totally awesome job🎉
Good stuff Knox.
Congrats man! Not to familiar with juniper but looks pretty cool. Another great video, rock on good sir!
I passed my JNCIA-Junos not too long ago (a week before they removed the free vouchers). Junos is weird, but I kind of see a few things that make sense after coming from IOS. Commit confirmed (or how to not accidentally lock yourself out) is one nice feature that already exists on IOS apparently. Going back to the exam topics, getting hit with BGP (beyond the coverage of the CCNA RS) and ISIS (which isn't even touched outside of CCNx SP) is just mean, for an associate level exam. The Junos Genius modules were, IMO, insufficient for the exam and had many errors (beyond typos) AND assumes prior exp/knowledge which the CCNA (RS) just so happens to cover.
Something not covered in the vid is "how" to get the images, which is surprisingly easy (AND FREE) compared to Cisco. Just created an account and asked for access to eval images (going through JTAC is actually covered in the exam) for study purposes, and a day later, they confirmed it (and even CALLED to verify I had access, which was surprising). Labbing with vMX (especially with vSRX) is significantly more resource (cpu/ram) hungry than IOS, which I learned the hard way.
Again, thanks for your insights. I see the lockdown beard is here to stay. The next few months for me are filled with grind (thanks Microsoft and Palo Alto for your free exam vouchers).
Congratulations
Congratulations.
Congrats... could you let us know if you can do a video on Segment Routing?
Planning to do a JNCIS-SP course ?
It is now on cbt nuggets , great stuff
I passed today JNCIS-SP !!
Congratulations!.
What study materials do you recommend?
@@enriquegabriel7708 juniper recommended training, or if not available check old jncis book, is on the internet, good luck
@@alinbandiu thank you!
Great video😀Which is the best source for JNCIS-SP materials?
Udemy/ CBT nuggets/ juniper materials ??
Could you please suggest?
how many resources do u have to run it? 7:51
friend any suggestion on how to make a complete topology on laptop....what are the options available
.
HELLO ,I WANT TO STUDY MCSA FROM SCRATCH TO MCSE(SERVER 2016 OR 2019) PLEASE HELP ME OUT WITH IT.
any advice to prepare JNCIP-SP? I don't find any interesting book.
So learning JNCIS requires you to learn also the more advanced level other than that you are currently studying, just like preparing for CCNA but also need to learn CCNP...🤔
Would you pass the Cisco SPCOR?
Probably not
Export would have worked if you log in first or your password is root/Juniper
2nd
1st
Please share Dump files of JNCIS-SP