2. When prompted, press Esc to interrupt the boot process and enter ROM Monitor mode. You should immediately see a rommon prompt (rommon #0>).
3. At the rommon prompt, enter the confreg command to view the current configuration register setting: rommon #0>confreg
4. The current configuration register should be the default of 0x01 (it will actually display as 0x00000001). The security appliance will ask if you want to make changes to the configuration register. Answer no when prompted.
5. You must change the configuration register to 0x41, which tells the appliance to ignore its saved (startup) configuration upon boot:
6. Reset the appliance with the boot command:
7. Notice that the security appliance ignores its startup configuration during the boot process. When it finishes booting, you should see a generic User Mode prompt:
8. Enter the enable command to enter Privileged Mode. When the appliance prompts you for a password, simply press (at this point, the password is blank):
9. Copy the startup configuration file into the running configuration with the following command:
10. The previously saved configuration is now the active configuration, but since the security appliance is already in Privileged Mode, privileged access is not disabled. Next, in configuration mode, enter the following command to change the Privileged Mode password to a known value (in this case, we'll use the password system):
11. While still in Configuration Mode, reset the configuration register to the default of 0x01 to force the security appliance to read its startup configuration on boot:
12. Use the following commands to view the configuration register setting:
13. At bottom of the output of the show version command, you should see the following statement: Configuration register is 0x41 (will be 0x1 at next reload)
14. Save the current configuration with the copy run start command to make the above changes persistent:
15. Reload the security appliance: asa# reload System config has been modified. Save? [Y]es/[N]o:yes
Cryptochecksum: e87f1433 54896e6b 4e21d072 d71a9cbf
2149 bytes copied in 1.480 secs (2149 bytes/sec) Proceed with reload? [confirm]
When your security appliance reloads, you should be able to use your newly reset password to enter privileged mode.
Copyright (c) 2007 Don R. Crawley