One of the more useful features in troubleshooting on the PIX/ASA (which we used until recently) is the packet tracer, which allows us to enter source/destination IP/port, etc and check to see if a given connection is allowed or blocked, and by which rule. Is there an equivalent feature in the PA units?
The Cisco ASA packet tracer allows you to propose a hypothetical flow and runs it through the engine as if it were real. Evaluating the NAT and route dicisions which would likely apply in addition to the policy/ACL allow/deny logic.
this is up to layer 4 of the OSI, which gives good details on: known route/path, NAT and whether there is a supporting rule. If the packet gets dropped, there is good information which points out where and why it was dropped. Which gives guidance on what needs to be added to resolve it.
So i actually got 2 problems, first one is that i tried to install the cisco packet tracer on my linux mint desktop, but i forgot to agree to the eula, but now everytime i try to install it again, it just gives me an error, even after restarting pc, and downloading the file again, ig that's because it arleady installed some files, and idk how to remove them. The second problem, is that i tried to install it on my arch linux laptop, i converted the debian package into arch an arch linux one, and tried to install it with pacman, but now it wants to download 6 whole gigabytes of something, even tho on linux mint it didnt need to? and then it wants to install 25GB of data? like i got the space, but i really don't want to waste so much of it, since its only a 166 gig ssd, so is there any better way to install deb package on arch linux? would appreciate a solution to any of those problems
Are you new to using CISCO packet tracer and not sure where to actually start? Then this tutorial is for you! I know the struggle of trying to figure out something new so I hope this helps you get your footing in using CISCO packet tracer.
Finally, please read the copyright file at /usr/share/licenses/packettracer/COPYRIGHT for the End-user License Agreement (EULA) and the Supplemental End-user License Agreement (SEULA), and uninstall if you do not agree with them. If you agree, the program can be found under most menu systems in the Internet category, or you run the packettracer binary.
The Cisco Packet Tracer-based Assessment Environment Check is used to confirm that students can start packet tracer activities for assessments such as practice and final exams. It is critical that you have a working version of Java installed. Perform the check at to confirm whether or not this ability is functional.
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