tomekadascientiam
Dabbler
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2013
- Messages
- 37
I think FreeNAS needs a running config.
I am not by any means a Router expert, but I often found deploying and or trouble shooting routers was much easier if I used the running config as a template. Our team had a master config that we would use for each deployment. For large deployments we had scripts we used to alter these configs, for small ones we altered them by hand. If there was a problem we could not easily solve we simply grabbed a copy of our running config and diffed it with the master config or the backup config. We could also post that config to our team site and members could examine it to see if they could spot the problem. We documented changes to the router by sending the configs to our team boss. Our team boss could audit any router by examining its running config. Other teams had the ability to emulate our router by using these running configs they would use these emulations to valuate changes, and to come up with suggestions for future changes.
I am not by any means a Router expert, but I often found deploying and or trouble shooting routers was much easier if I used the running config as a template. Our team had a master config that we would use for each deployment. For large deployments we had scripts we used to alter these configs, for small ones we altered them by hand. If there was a problem we could not easily solve we simply grabbed a copy of our running config and diffed it with the master config or the backup config. We could also post that config to our team site and members could examine it to see if they could spot the problem. We documented changes to the router by sending the configs to our team boss. Our team boss could audit any router by examining its running config. Other teams had the ability to emulate our router by using these running configs they would use these emulations to valuate changes, and to come up with suggestions for future changes.