>   I was wondering if anyone has come across a router where the 
hostname  showed up as such:
> 
>   Router(boot)#
> 
> one of my peers has told me this means the router did not 
fully boot up. Is  this true?  Boot mode is what he called it. 
Any help is much appreciated in  advance.<

While I am reasonably confident that this issue has been 
addressed at least one hundred times in the archives, I am going 
to take a new and innovative approach on this issue.  Here 
goes...

Consider your router to be like a little kid.  It generally has 
no intelligence until you take the time to educate it.  It will 
function without education, but it does so much better with a 
little bit of intelligence turned on.  Consider that you have 
the ability to influence the intelligence of this router and 
restrict whether it will remain at the fifth grade level, or 
advance on to doctoral studies in network engineering 8-)  
First, you will need to turn on the "proper" learning 
environment. You do this by going to the proper mode on this 
device and first determine if it has a brain.  Sadly alas, not 
all routers have brains installed!  Some of them have lost their 
brains along the way due to maliciousness on the part of others, 
abandonment, or neglect.  Sometimes, they have to get their 
brains every time they wake up (it's a difficult life for a 
router).  If they can't find their brains, they wander aimlessly 
through router life as an uneducated router.  

To check to see if the router has any brains, do a "show flash" 
command when you log in at priviledge mode.  If there is a valid 
brain installed, it will have a cryptic name such as 
c2500-js-l_120-3.bin.  Once you have determined that you have 
the correct brain for your given router, you need to see if 
somebody turned on the learning settings for this device.  The 
learning settings will govern how much knowledge the device can 
attain.  There are three levels generally.  They are as follows:

Rock Stupid (also called rommon mode, less than helpful mode, 
0x2100 mode) - at this level, the router will never really 
amount to much in life.  This is what your mom warned you about 
when she brought up the topic of getting a good education!  The 
good news is that you can rapidly advance to a more educated 
station in life by going to the next educational level.  See 
grade school mode below.

Grade School mode (also called Rxboot mode, or the baby IOS 
mode,boot mode, or 0x2101 mode)-  In this mode, you router is in 
a good position to learn a lot.  It will not actually perform 
any useful work however, because it needs more intelligence to 
function.  It can do the basics, such as find its way around its 
environment, ask others for directions, and so on.  Of course, 
it will never rise to its full potential until it gets a good 
education and completes the final education portal (where all 
future learning takes place).  See High Scool diploma mode 
below.

High School diploma mode (also known as Full boot mode, normal 
boot, 0x2102 mode and other names).  This is the full level of 
educational awareness.  This is the mode where all forms of 
advanced learning take place.  It is an absolutely essential 
prerequisite to have the high school diploma mode before going 
on to advanced educational pursuits such as BS/BA mode, Masters 
mode, or PHD mode.  We can get to these more advanced modes 
simply by swapping out our existing brain (IOS) for a better 
brain (More advanced feature set IOS).  Of course, you will have 
to pay tuition (licensing fees) for that higher education;-)

So, to recap, first you need to see if you have a brain 
installed.  Do a "show flash" command at user or priviledged 
mode to see that a valid operating system exists.  Check what 
you have against the chart on this page to see if it is correct:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/620/4.html

or,

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/620/1.html

or,

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/620/5.shtml#identifiers

Once you know you have the correct brain for your router, then 
see if it is set to the proper leaning mode listed above.  This 
is done very simply by inspecting the learning index indicator 
(also called the configuration register) with the following 
command:

"show version"

Look for the output at the bottom (after pressing the space bar 
once) for the configuration register setting.  If it is anything 
other than high school mode (0x2102), you may need to change it. 
Go into your device and get to the following prompt:

Router(boot)# configure terminal<CR>
Router(boot)(config)#configuration-register 0x2102

Finally verify you did it correctly by typing the following 
command:

Router(boot)#show version<CR>

You should see the following line appear in the output:

Configuration register is 0x2101(will be 0x2102 at next reload)

Of course, if your router does not have a brain (show flash 
command yields no operating system in flash), you made need to 
perform brain surgery.  That will be a matter for later 
discussion :-)

HTH,

Paul Werner

p.s.  If you are eager to learn about brain surgery on Cisco 
routers, try this link:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/620/6.html 

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