Cisco IOS Modes – User, Privileged, Config & Interface

1. Why IOS Has Multiple Modes

Cisco IOS (Internetwork Operating System) uses a hierarchical mode structure to protect the device from accidental or unauthorised changes. Every command in IOS is only available at a specific mode level — you cannot run a configuration command from user mode, and you cannot run a detailed debug command until you have reached privileged EXEC mode. This design enforces a clear separation between viewing state (lower modes) and changing state (higher modes).

Understanding which mode you are in — identified by the prompt on screen — is the first skill every Cisco engineer must master. An incorrect command at the wrong mode simply returns an error; understanding why that error occurs and how to reach the correct mode quickly is fundamental to working efficiently at the CLI.

Mode Prompt Purpose Access Restricted?
User EXEC Router> Basic monitoring; limited show commands; no configuration Password optional (line password or AAA)
Privileged EXEC Router# Full show commands; debug; copy; reload; entry point to config modes Yes — enable password or enable secret
Global Configuration Router(config)# Device-wide configuration: hostname, routing, ACLs, AAA Requires Privileged EXEC first
Interface Configuration Router(config-if)# Configure a specific interface: IP address, description, speed Entered from Global Config
Line Configuration Router(config-line)# Configure console, VTY, and auxiliary lines: passwords, timeouts Entered from Global Config
Router / Protocol Config Router(config-router)# Configure routing process: OSPF, EIGRP, BGP, RIP networks Entered from Global Config
Sub-Interface Config Router(config-subif)# Configure logical sub-interfaces (GRE, Router-on-a-Stick) Entered from Global Config
VLAN Config Switch(config-vlan)# Configure VLAN parameters: name, state (on switches) Entered from Global Config

Related pages: SSH Configuration | show running-config | show ip route | show ip interface brief | show ip protocols | AAA Overview | AAA Authentication Methods | OSPF Overview | EIGRP Overview | Hostname, Banner & Password Lab | Console & VTY Line Configuration Lab | SSH Configuration Lab | Basic Interface Configuration Lab | Login Security & Brute-Force Protection Lab | Saving & Managing Cisco Configurations Lab

2. IOS Mode Navigation Map

  IOS MODE HIERARCHY — Routers and Switches

  [Power on / Console / SSH login]
          │
          ▼
  ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  USER EXEC MODE                                   │
  │  Prompt: Router>  or  Switch>                     │
  │  Commands: ping, traceroute, show version,        │
  │            telnet, disconnect, enable             │
  └───────────────────────────┬───────────────────────┘
                              │ enable  (+ password if set)
                              │
                              ▼
  ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  PRIVILEGED EXEC MODE                             │
  │  Prompt: Router#  or  Switch#                     │
  │  Commands: ALL show commands, debug, copy,        │
  │            reload, write, configure terminal      │
  └───────────────────────────┬───────────────────────┘
               ┌──────────────┘
               │ configure terminal  (conf t)
               │
               ▼
  ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  GLOBAL CONFIGURATION MODE                                         │
  │  Prompt: Router(config)#                                           │
  │  Commands: hostname, ip route, access-list, aaa, ntp, logging     │
  └──┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬──┘
     │                                                              │
     │ interface Gi0/0          line vty 0 15    router ospf 1     │
     │                          line con 0       router eigrp 100  │
     ▼                          ▼                ▼                  │
  ┌──────────────────┐  ┌──────────────────┐  ┌──────────────┐     │
  │INTERFACE CONFIG  │  │LINE CONFIG       │  │ROUTER CONFIG │     │
  │Router(config-if)#│  │Router(config-    │  │Router(config-│     │
  │                  │  │line)#            │  │router)#      │     │
  └──────────────────┘  └──────────────────┘  └──────────────┘     │
                                                                     │ vlan 10
                                                                     ▼
                                                             ┌───────────────┐
                                                             │VLAN CONFIG    │
                                                             │Switch(config- │
                                                             │vlan)#         │
                                                             └───────────────┘

  NAVIGATION COMMANDS — memorise these:
  ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
  │  enable           — User EXEC  → Privileged EXEC                │
  │  configure terminal (conf t) — Priv EXEC → Global Config        │
  │  interface  — Global Config → Interface Config            │
  │  line       — Global Config → Line Config                 │
  │  router    — Global Config → Router Config               │
  │  exit             — Back one level (any sub-mode → parent)      │
  │  end  or  Ctrl+Z  — ANY mode → Privileged EXEC (instant escape) │
  │  disable          — Privileged EXEC → User EXEC                 │
  └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

3. User EXEC Mode

User EXEC mode is the entry-level access mode. It is the first mode a user reaches after logging in via the console port, an SSH session, or a Telnet connection. The prompt ends with a greater-than sign (>). User EXEC mode is intentionally restricted — it provides enough visibility to confirm basic device state but prevents any changes or detailed inspection.

  Router>
  Switch>

3.1 Commands Available in User EXEC Mode

Command Purpose
enable Enter Privileged EXEC mode (prompts for enable password if configured)
ping <ip> Send ICMP echo requests to test basic reachability
traceroute <ip> Trace the Layer 3 path to a destination
show version Display IOS version, uptime, hardware model, and memory
show ip interface brief Quick summary of all interfaces and their IP/status (read-only)
telnet <ip> Open a Telnet session to another device
ssh -l <user> <ip> Open an SSH session to another device
disconnect Terminate an active SSH/Telnet session
logout / exit Log out from the current session and return to the login prompt
? List all commands available in the current mode (context-sensitive help)
Note: Many detailed show commands (such as show running-config, show ip route, and show interfaces) are not available in User EXEC mode. They require Privileged EXEC. If a show command is refused with % Invalid input detected, move to Privileged EXEC first with enable.

4. Privileged EXEC Mode

Privileged EXEC mode is the full-access operational mode. The prompt ends with a hash / pound sign (#). From here, an engineer can run any show command, execute debug, manage files, save or reload the configuration, and enter Global Configuration mode to make changes. This mode is protected by an enable password or, more securely, an enable secret (which uses MD5 hashing).

  Router#
  Switch#

  Entering Privileged EXEC:
  Router> enable
  Password: ****           ← Enable secret/password entered here (not echoed)
  Router#

  Returning to User EXEC:
  Router# disable
  Router>

4.1 Key Commands in Privileged EXEC Mode

Category Example Commands Purpose
Show / Verify show running-config
show startup-config
show ip route
show interfaces
show version
show ip ospf neighbor
Display all current configuration and device state; most show commands require Privileged EXEC
Debug debug ip ospf events
debug ip icmp
undebug all
Enable real-time event tracing; produces verbose output; always disable with undebug all after use
File / Config Management copy running-config startup-config
copy running-config tftp
write memory (or wr)
erase startup-config
Save running configuration to NVRAM; back up to TFTP; erase the saved config
Reload / Reset reload
boot system
Restart the device; specify alternate boot image
Enter Config Mode configure terminal (or conf t) Transition to Global Configuration mode to make changes
Clock / Time clock set 09:14:22 14 March 2025 Manually set the hardware clock (normally done by NTP)
Terminal terminal length 0
terminal monitor
Disable paging (prevent --More-- prompts); enable syslog in VTY session
enable secret vs enable password: Always use enable secret <password> — it stores the password as an MD5 hash in the config. enable password stores the password in plain text (or weak Type 7 encryption with service password-encryption). If both are configured, enable secret always takes precedence.

5. Global Configuration Mode

Global Configuration mode is the top-level configuration mode — commands entered here affect the entire device. The prompt is Router(config)#. This mode is entered from Privileged EXEC with configure terminal (abbreviated conf t).

  Router# configure terminal
  Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
  Router(config)#

5.1 Key Global Configuration Commands

Command Purpose
hostname <name> Set the device hostname — immediately changes the CLI prompt
enable secret <password> Set the privileged EXEC password (MD5-hashed)
service password-encryption Apply weak Type 7 encryption to all plain-text passwords in config
ip route <dest> <mask> <next-hop> Add a static route to the routing table
ip domain-name <name> Set the domain name — required for generating RSA keys for SSH
crypto key generate rsa modulus 2048 Generate RSA key pair to enable SSH
username <name> privilege <lvl> secret <pass> Create a local user account with a specific privilege level
aaa new-model Enable the AAA security framework
no ip domain-lookup Disable DNS lookup — prevents the router from trying to resolve mistyped commands as hostnames (a lab essential)
banner motd # message # Set the Message-of-the-Day banner displayed at login
ip access-list standard <name> Create/enter a named standard ACL
logging host <ip> Configure remote syslog server
ntp server <ip> Configure NTP server for time synchronisation

6. Interface Configuration Mode

Interface Configuration mode is entered from Global Config by specifying the interface type and number. The prompt changes to Router(config-if)#. All commands entered here apply only to the selected interface — changing to a different interface requires a new interface command.

  ! Enter interface config mode:
  Router(config)# interface GigabitEthernet0/0
  Router(config-if)#

  ! Shorthand accepted:
  Router(config)# interface gi0/0        ← abbreviated
  Router(config)# interface gi 0/0       ← with space
  Router(config)# interface g0/0         ← minimal abbreviation

6.1 Key Interface Configuration Commands

Command Purpose
ip address <ip> <mask> Assign an IPv4 address to the interface
ipv6 address <addr>/<prefix> Assign an IPv6 address to the interface
no shutdown Enable the interface (interfaces are administratively down by default on routers)
shutdown Administratively disable the interface
description <text> Add a human-readable label to the interface (for documentation)
speed <10|100|1000|auto> Set the interface speed (default auto)
duplex <half|full|auto> Set the duplex mode (default auto)
switchport mode access Set switch port as an access port (Layer 2, one VLAN)
switchport access vlan <id> Assign the access port to a specific VLAN
switchport mode trunk Set switch port as a trunk port (carries multiple VLANs)
ip helper-address <ip> Configure DHCP relay — forward broadcasts to a remote DHCP server
ip access-group <name> <in|out> Apply an ACL to the interface in the specified direction
spanning-tree portfast Enable PortFast on an access port (skip STP listening/learning)

6.2 Moving Between Interfaces

  ! Move directly from one interface to another (no need to exit first):
  Router(config-if)# interface GigabitEthernet0/1
  Router(config-if)#         ← Now in Gi0/1 context

  ! Return to Global Config:
  Router(config-if)# exit
  Router(config)#

  ! Jump directly to Privileged EXEC from any config sub-mode:
  Router(config-if)# end
  Router#
  ! OR use Ctrl+Z — same effect as 'end'

7. Line Configuration Mode

Line Configuration mode is used to configure the management access lines of the device — the console port, VTY (virtual terminal) lines for SSH/Telnet, and the auxiliary port. The prompt is Router(config-line)#.

  ! Console line (physical console port):
  Router(config)# line console 0
  Router(config-line)#

  ! VTY lines for SSH / Telnet (0-4 allows 5 simultaneous sessions):
  Router(config)# line vty 0 4
  Router(config-line)#

  ! All VTY lines (0-15 allows 16 simultaneous sessions):
  Router(config)# line vty 0 15
  Router(config-line)#

  ! Auxiliary port (serial modem access):
  Router(config)# line aux 0
  Router(config-line)#

7.1 Key Line Configuration Commands

Command Purpose
password <password> Set the line password (used with login, not login local)
login Require the line password for access; used with the password command
login local Require a local username/password from the device's user database (requires username commands in global config)
transport input ssh Allow only SSH connections on VTY lines (disables Telnet)
transport input telnet ssh Allow both Telnet and SSH (not recommended for production)
transport input none Block all remote access to VTY lines
exec-timeout <min> <sec> Set the idle session timeout — exec-timeout 5 0 disconnects after 5 minutes of inactivity
exec-timeout 0 0 Disable idle timeout — session never disconnects (lab use only)
logging synchronous Prevent syslog messages from interrupting command typing by re-displaying the current input after a log message
access-class <acl> in Apply an ACL to restrict which source IPs can connect to VTY lines

8. Router / Routing Process Configuration Mode

Router Configuration mode (also called Routing Process mode) is entered to configure dynamic routing protocols — OSPF, EIGRP, BGP, RIP, and others. The prompt is Router(config-router)#. Commands here apply to the specific routing process started with the router command.

  ! Enter OSPF routing process (process ID 1):
  Router(config)# router ospf 1
  Router(config-router)#

  ! Enter EIGRP routing process (AS 100):
  Router(config)# router eigrp 100
  Router(config-router)#

  ! Enter BGP (AS 65001):
  Router(config)# router bgp 65001
  Router(config-router)#

  ! Enter RIPv2:
  Router(config)# router rip
  Router(config-router)# version 2

8.1 Common Router Process Commands

Protocol Key Commands in (config-router)#
OSPF network <ip> <wildcard> area <n>, router-id <ip>, passive-interface <intf>, default-information originate
EIGRP network <ip> <wildcard>, no auto-summary, passive-interface <intf>, eigrp router-id <ip>
BGP neighbor <ip> remote-as <n>, network <ip> mask <mask>, bgp router-id <ip>
RIP version 2, network <classful-ip>, no auto-summary, passive-interface <intf>

9. Other Configuration Sub-Modes

9.1 Sub-Interface Configuration Mode

  ! Create and enter a logical sub-interface (used for ROAS, GRE):
  Router(config)# interface GigabitEthernet0/0.10
  Router(config-subif)#

  ! Key sub-interface commands:
  Router(config-subif)# encapsulation dot1q 10       ! Tag for VLAN 10
  Router(config-subif)# ip address 192.168.10.1 255.255.255.0
  Router(config-subif)# description Sales-VLAN-Gateway

9.2 VLAN Configuration Mode (Switches)

  ! Create and name a VLAN:
  Switch(config)# vlan 10
  Switch(config-vlan)# name Sales
  Switch(config-vlan)# state active   ! or 'suspend'
  Switch(config-vlan)# exit

  ! Create multiple VLANs quickly:
  Switch(config)# vlan 10
  Switch(config-vlan)# name Sales
  Switch(config)# vlan 20
  Switch(config-vlan)# name Finance
  Switch(config)# vlan 30
  Switch(config-vlan)# name Engineering

9.3 Named ACL Configuration Mode

  ! Create/enter a named extended ACL:
  Router(config)# ip access-list extended BLOCK-HTTP
  Router(config-ext-nacl)# deny tcp any any eq 80
  Router(config-ext-nacl)# permit ip any any
  Router(config-ext-nacl)# exit

  ! Named standard ACL:
  Router(config)# ip access-list standard MGMT-ACCESS
  Router(config-std-nacl)# permit 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.255
  Router(config-std-nacl)# deny any

10. Complete Navigation Example – Router Configuration

The following is a complete walkthrough showing all mode transitions during a typical initial router setup, demonstrating how to navigate the IOS mode hierarchy efficiently.

  ! ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
  !  Starting from User EXEC after console login
  ! ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
  Router>
  Router> enable
  Password: (enable secret entered)
  Router#

  ! ── Enter Global Config ──────────────────────────────────────────
  Router# configure terminal
  Router(config)#

  ! ── Set hostname ─────────────────────────────────────────────────
  Router(config)# hostname HQ-Router
  HQ-Router(config)#                ← Prompt changes immediately

  ! ── Set enable secret ────────────────────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config)# enable secret Str0ngEnableP@ss
  HQ-Router(config)# service password-encryption

  ! ── Disable DNS lookup ───────────────────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config)# no ip domain-lookup

  ! ── Configure interface ──────────────────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config)# interface GigabitEthernet0/0
  HQ-Router(config-if)# description Link-to-ISP
  HQ-Router(config-if)# ip address 203.0.113.1 255.255.255.252
  HQ-Router(config-if)# no shutdown
  HQ-Router(config-if)#

  ! ── Move directly to another interface ───────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config-if)# interface GigabitEthernet0/1
  HQ-Router(config-if)# description LAN-Interface
  HQ-Router(config-if)# ip address 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0
  HQ-Router(config-if)# no shutdown

  ! ── Return to Global Config ──────────────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config-if)# exit
  HQ-Router(config)#

  ! ── Configure VTY lines for SSH only ─────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router(config)# line vty 0 15
  HQ-Router(config-line)# login local
  HQ-Router(config-line)# transport input ssh
  HQ-Router(config-line)# exec-timeout 10 0
  HQ-Router(config-line)# logging synchronous

  ! ── Jump back to Privileged EXEC from any sub-mode ───────────────
  HQ-Router(config-line)# end
  HQ-Router#

  ! ── Save the configuration ───────────────────────────────────────
  HQ-Router# copy running-config startup-config
  Destination filename [startup-config]?
  Building configuration...
  [OK]
  HQ-Router#

11. Useful IOS CLI Tips

Tip How It Works Example
Command abbreviation Any command can be shortened to the minimum unique prefix — IOS auto-completes if the abbreviation is unambiguous conf t = configure terminal
sh ip int br = show ip interface brief
Context-sensitive help (?) Typing ? alone lists all valid commands; typing a partial command then ? lists completions sh? — lists all commands starting with "sh"
show ip ? — lists all sub-options after "show ip"
Tab completion Press Tab to auto-complete a partially typed command conf<Tab>configure
Command history Up/down arrow keys cycle through previously entered commands; show history lists recent commands ↑ arrow recalls the last command for re-entry or editing
Ctrl+Z / end Instantly exit from any configuration sub-mode back to Privileged EXEC — faster than multiple exit commands From (config-if)# → press Ctrl+Z → #
no command Prepend no to any command to negate (remove) it no ip address removes the IP address
no shutdown enables an interface
no logging console disables console logging
terminal length 0 Disables the --More-- pagination prompt — all output scrolls continuously; useful for copying configs Router# terminal length 0
do command Run a Privileged EXEC command from inside a configuration sub-mode without exiting — very useful for verifying while configuring HQ-Router(config-if)# do show ip interface brief

12. Common Mode Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Mistake What Happens Fix
Trying to run show running-config from User EXEC % Invalid input detected at '^' marker — the command is not available at this mode level Type enable first to enter Privileged EXEC
Typing configuration commands in Privileged EXEC (without conf t) % Invalid input detected — config commands are only available in configuration modes Enter configure terminal first, then retype the command
Forgetting no shutdown on a newly configured interface Interface stays administratively down even though it has an IP; routing protocols will not form adjacencies While in (config-if)#, type no shutdown
Mistyping a hostname that IOS tries to DNS-resolve Router freezes for 30–60 seconds while trying to resolve the typo as a DNS name (e.g., Router# shwo ip route) Press Ctrl+C to abort; then configure no ip domain-lookup in Global Config to prevent this
Changes lost after reboot Running configuration changes exist only in RAM and are lost when the device restarts Always save: copy running-config startup-config or write memory
Using enable password instead of enable secret Password is stored in plain text (or weak reversible Type 7 cipher) in the running config — visible in show running-config Always use enable secret — stored as a one-way MD5 hash

13. Key Terms Quick Reference

Term Definition
User EXEC Mode Entry-level IOS mode (prompt Router>); limited read-only commands; no configuration capability; entered on login
Privileged EXEC Mode Full operational mode (prompt Router#); all show/debug/file commands; gateway to configuration modes; requires enable secret
Global Configuration Mode Device-wide configuration mode (prompt Router(config)#); entered with configure terminal; hostname, routes, AAA, banners configured here
Interface Configuration Mode Single-interface configuration mode (prompt Router(config-if)#); entered with interface <type> <number>; IP addresses, shutdown, description
Line Configuration Mode Management line configuration mode (prompt Router(config-line)#); entered with line console 0 or line vty 0 15; passwords, transport, timeouts
Router Configuration Mode Routing process mode (prompt Router(config-router)#); entered with router ospf, router eigrp, etc.; routing protocol parameters
enable Command typed in User EXEC to enter Privileged EXEC mode; prompts for the enable secret if one is configured
configure terminal Command typed in Privileged EXEC to enter Global Configuration mode; abbreviated conf t
exit Moves back one mode level (from any sub-mode to its parent)
end / Ctrl+Z Exits from any configuration mode directly back to Privileged EXEC in one step, regardless of nesting depth
enable secret Cisco IOS global config command that sets the Privileged EXEC password stored as an MD5 hash; always preferred over enable password
do A prefix that allows Privileged EXEC commands (show, copy) to be run from inside any configuration sub-mode without exiting
no command Prepending no to any IOS configuration command negates or removes that configuration
Running Configuration The currently active configuration stored in RAM; immediately reflects all changes; lost on reboot unless saved to startup-config
Startup Configuration The configuration stored in NVRAM; loaded into RAM on boot; updated with copy running-config startup-config

14. Cisco IOS Modes – Practice Quiz

1. A technician logs into a Cisco router and sees the prompt Router>. They try to run show running-config but receive % Invalid input detected. What is the reason and the correct fix?

Correct answer is B. The Router> prompt indicates User EXEC mode. Many detailed show commands — including show running-config, show ip route, show interfaces, and show ip ospf neighbor — are restricted to Privileged EXEC mode. The fix is simply to type enable; if an enable secret is configured the device will prompt for it. After entering the correct password, the prompt changes to Router# and all show commands become available.

2. What is the key difference between exit and end when used inside a configuration sub-mode such as Router(config-if)#?

Correct answer is C. This is one of the most important navigation distinctions for the CCNA exam and daily IOS use. exit is a single-step backward navigation command — from (config-if)# it returns to (config)#; from (config)# it returns to # (Privileged EXEC). end (and its keyboard shortcut Ctrl+Z) is a direct escape to Privileged EXEC from any configuration mode, regardless of how deeply nested you are. When you need to quickly run a show command to verify your work and then come back to configure more, end or Ctrl+Z is the fastest path.

3. An engineer is in Router(config-router)# mode and needs to run show ip ospf neighbor without exiting configuration mode. Which command achieves this?

Correct answer is A. The do keyword is a powerful IOS feature that allows any Privileged EXEC command to be executed from within any configuration mode. Without do, show commands are not available in (config-router)# or any other config sub-mode. Using do show ip ospf neighbor runs the show command and returns you to (config-router)# without disrupting your configuration session. This is extremely useful when verifying the effect of configuration changes as you make them.

4. What is the correct sequence to configure an IP address on interface GigabitEthernet0/1 from a fresh router prompt?

Correct answer is D. This is the complete, correct navigation sequence. Starting from User EXEC (>): (1) enable enters Privileged EXEC (#); (2) configure terminal enters Global Config ((config)#); (3) interface GigabitEthernet0/1 enters Interface Config ((config-if)#); (4) ip address assigns the address; (5) no shutdown enables the interface (router interfaces are administratively down by default). Skipping any step results in a % Invalid input detected error because the command is not available at that mode level.

5. What command, entered in Global Configuration mode, immediately stops the router from attempting to DNS-resolve mistyped commands (a common lab annoyance)?

Correct answer is B. By default, Cisco IOS treats any unrecognised command as a hostname and attempts to resolve it via DNS — causing a 30–60 second freeze while waiting for the DNS query to time out. This is particularly frustrating when you mistype a command at the CLI. The fix is no ip domain-lookup in Global Config mode, which disables DNS-based hostname resolution for CLI input. This is one of the first commands most network engineers apply in a lab environment and is often included in initial device hardening templates.

6. Why should enable secret be used instead of enable password?

Correct answer is C. The critical difference is how the password is stored. enable password stores the password in plain text in the running and startup configs — anyone who can run show running-config or read a backup config file can see it. Even with service password-encryption, the resulting Type 7 cipher is trivially reversible with freely available tools. enable secret uses an MD5 hash — a one-way function that cannot be reversed to obtain the original password. If both are configured, IOS always uses the enable secret and ignores the enable password.

7. An engineer configures a new IP address on an interface and adds a route, then notices the changes disappear after the device is power-cycled. What was missed?

Correct answer is A. Cisco IOS maintains two separate configuration stores: the running-config in volatile RAM (active immediately, lost on power loss) and the startup-config in non-volatile NVRAM (persists through reboots). Changes made through configuration modes are written to running-config only. To make them survive a reboot, the running-config must be explicitly saved: copy running-config startup-config (abbreviated copy run start) or write memory (abbreviated wr). Forgetting this step is one of the most common mistakes for engineers new to IOS.

8. What mode and command sequence is required to configure VTY lines to accept only SSH connections and require a local username and password?

Correct answer is D. VTY line parameters — including which transport protocols are accepted and what authentication method is used — are configured in Line Configuration mode, entered with line vty 0 15 from Global Config. The command transport input ssh restricts the VTY lines to SSH only (Telnet is blocked). The command login local requires authentication against the local username database (created with username <name> secret <pass> in Global Config). These commands have no effect if entered in the wrong mode.

9. A network engineer types hostname Branch-Router in Privileged EXEC mode and receives % Invalid input detected. What is the problem?

Correct answer is B. hostname is a Global Configuration mode command — it modifies a persistent device-wide setting and therefore belongs in the configuration hierarchy, not in Privileged EXEC. While in Privileged EXEC (Router#), the engineer must first type configure terminal to enter Router(config)#, and only then can hostname Branch-Router be executed successfully. The prompt will immediately change to Branch-Router(config)# reflecting the new hostname.

10. What happens when an engineer types interface GigabitEthernet0/2 while already in Router(config-if)# mode for GigabitEthernet0/1?

Correct answer is C. Cisco IOS allows you to move directly from one interface context to another by issuing a new interface command without first typing exit. The CLI immediately switches context to the newly specified interface — the prompt shows Router(config-if)# but all commands now apply to GigabitEthernet0/2. This is a deliberately efficient design that allows engineers to configure many interfaces in sequence without the overhead of repeatedly typing exit. The same applies when moving between other configuration sub-modes — you can type line vty 0 15 directly from (config-if)# without exiting first.

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