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Description
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Network Warrior
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General Information
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Type.................: Ebook
Part Size............: 6,619,934 bytes


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Posted by............: ~tqw~

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Release Notes
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From the Publisher

Written by networking veteran with 20 years of experience, Network Warrior
provides a thorough and practical introduction to the entire network
infrastructure, from cabling to the routers. What you need to learn to pass a
Cisco certification exam such as CCNA and what you need to know to survive in
the real world are two very different things. The strategies that this book
offers weren 't on the exam, but they 're exactly what you need to do your job
well. Network Warrior takes you step by step through the world of hubs,
switches, firewalls, and more, including ways to troubleshoot a congested
network, and when to upgrade and why. Along the way, you 'll gain an historical
perspective of various networking features, such as the way Ethernet evolved.
Based on the author 's own experience as well as those he worked for and with,
Network Warrior is a Cisco-centric book, focused primarily on the TCP/IP
protocol and Ethernet networks -- the realm that Cisco Systems now dominates.
The book covers: The type of networks now in use, from LANs, WANs and MANs to
CANs The OSI Model and the layers involved in sending data Hubs, repeaters,
switches, and trunks in practice Auto negotiation and why it 's a common problem
in network slowdowns Route maps, routing protocols, and switching algorithms in
Cisco routers The resilient Ethernet -- how to make things truly redundant Cisco
6500 multi-layer switches and the Catalyst 3750 switch Telecom nomenclature --
why it 's different from the data world T1 and DS3 Firewall theory, designing
access lists, authentication in Cisco devices Server load balancing technology
Content switch module in action Designing QOS and what QOS does not do IP
designandsubnetting made easy The book also explains how to sell your ideas to
management, how networks become a mess as a company grows, and why change
control is your friend. Network Warrior will help network administrators and
engineers win the complex battles they face every day.

Part I: Hubs, Switches, and Switching
Chapter 1. What Is a Network?
Chapter 2. Hubs and Switches
Section 2.1. Hubs
Section 2.2. Switches
Chapter 3. Auto-Negotiation
Section 3.1. What Is Auto-Negotiation?
Section 3.2. How Auto-Negotiation Works
Section 3.3. When Auto-Negotiation Fails
Section 3.4. Auto-Negotiation Best Practices
Section 3.5. Configuring Auto-Negotiation
Chapter 4. VLANs
Section 4.1. Connecting VLANs
Section 4.2. Configuring VLANs
Chapter 5. Trunking
Section 5.1. How Trunks Work
Section 5.2. Configuring Trunks
Chapter 6. VLAN Trunking Protocol
Section 6.1. VTP Pruning
Section 6.2. Dangers of VTP
Section 6.3. Configuring VTP
Chapter 7. EtherChannel
Section 7.1. Load Balancing
Section 7.2. Configuring and Managing EtherChannel
Chapter 8. Spanning Tree
Section 8.1. Broadcast Storms
Section 8.2. MAC Address Table Instability
Section 8.3. Preventing Loops with Spanning Tree
Section 8.4. Managing Spanning Tree
Section 8.5. Additional Spanning Tree Features
Section 8.6. Common Spanning Tree Problems
Section 8.7. Designing to Prevent Spanning Tree Problems
Part II: Routers and Routing
Chapter 9. Routing and Routers
Section 9.1. Routing Tables
Section 9.2. Route Types
Section 9.3. The IP Routing Table
Chapter 10. Routing Protocols
Section 10.1. Communication Between Routers
Section 10.2. Metrics and Protocol Types
Section 10.3. Administrative Distance
Section 10.4. Specific Routing Protocols
Chapter 11. Redistribution
Section 11.1. Redistributing into RIP
Section 11.2. Redistributing into EIGRP
Section 11.3. Redistributing into OSPF
Section 11.4. Mutual Redistribution
Section 11.5. Redistribution Loops
Section 11.6. Limiting Redistribution
Chapter 12. Tunnels
Section 12.1. GRE Tunnels
Section 12.2. GRE Tunnels and Routing Protocols
Section 12.3. GRE and Access Lists
Chapter 13. Resilient Ethernet
Section 13.1. HSRP
Section 13.2. HSRP Interface Tracking
Section 13.3. When HSRP Isn't Enough
Chapter 14. Route Maps
Section 14.1. Building a Route Map
Section 14.2. Policy-Routing Example
Chapter 15. Switching Algorithms in Cisco Routers
Section 15.1. Process Switching
Section 15.2. Interrupt Context Switching
Section 15.3. Configuring and Managing Switching Paths
Part III: Multilayer Switches
Chapter 16. Multilayer Switches
Section 16.1. Configuring SVIs
Section 16.2. Multilayer Switch Models
Chapter 17. Cisco 6500 Multilayer Switches
Section 17.1. Architecture
Section 17.2. CatOS Versus IOS
Chapter 18. Catalyst 3750 Features
Section 18.1. Stacking
Section 18.2. Interface Ranges
Section 18.3. Macros
Section 18.4. Flex Links
Section 18.5. Storm Control
Section 18.6. Port Security
Section 18.7. SPAN
Section 18.8. Voice VLAN
Section 18.9. QoS
Part IV: Telecom
Chapter 19. Telecom Nomenclature
Section 19.1. Introduction and History
Section 19.2. Telecom Glossary
Chapter 20. T1
Section 20.1. Understanding T1 Duplex
Section 20.2. Types of T1
Section 20.3. Encoding
Section 20.4. Framing
Section 20.5. Performance Monitoring
Section 20.6. Alarms
Section 20.7. Troubleshooting T1s
Section 20.8. Configuring T1s
Chapter 21. DS3
Section 21.1. Framing
Section 21.2. Line Coding
Section 21.3. Configuring DS3s
Chapter 22. Frame Relay
Section 22.1. Ordering Frame-Relay Service
Section 22.2. Frame-Relay Network Design
Section 22.3. Oversubscription
Section 22.4. Local Management Interface (LMI)
Section 22.5. Configuring Frame Relay
Section 22.6. Troubleshooting Frame Relay
Part V: Security and Firewalls
Chapter 23. Access Lists
Section 23.1. Designing Access Lists
Section 23.2. ACLs in Multilayer Switches
Section 23.3. Reflexive Access Lists
Chapter 24. Authentication in Cisco Devices
Section 24.1. Basic (Non-AAA) Authentication
Section 24.2. AAA Authentication
Chapter 25. Firewall Theory
Section 25.1. Best Practices
Section 25.2. The DMZ
Section 25.3. Alternate Designs
Chapter 26. PIX Firewall Configuration
Section 26.1. Interfaces and Priorities
Section 26.2. Names
Section 26.3. Object Groups
Section 26.4. Fixups
Section 26.5. Failover
Section 26.6. NAT
Section 26.7. Miscellaneous
Section 26.8. Troubleshooting
Part VI: Server Load Balancing
Chapter 27. Server Load-Balancing Technology
Section 27.1. Types of Load Balancing
Section 27.2. How Server Load Balancing Works
Section 27.3. Configuring Server Load Balancing
Chapter 28. Content Switch Modules in Action
Section 28.1. Common Tasks
Section 28.2. Upgrading the CSM
Part VII: Quality of Service
Chapter 29. Introduction to QoS
Section 29.1. Types of QoS
Section 29.2. QoS Mechanics
Section 29.3. Common QoS Misconceptions
Chapter 30. Designing a QoS Scheme
Section 30.1. Determining Requirements
Section 30.2. Configuring the Routers
Chapter 31. The Congested Network
Section 31.1. Determining Whether the Network Is Congested
Section 31.2. Resolving the Problem
Chapter 32. The Converged Network
Section 32.1. Configuration
Section 32.2. Monitoring QoS
Section 32.3. Troubleshooting a Converged Network
Part VIII: Designing Networks
Chapter 33. Designing Networks
Section 33.1. Documentation
Section 33.2. Naming Conventions for Devices
Section 33.3. Network Designs
Chapter 34. IP Design
Section 34.1. Public Versus Private IP Space
Section 34.2. VLSM
Section 34.3. CIDR
Section 34.4. Allocating IP Network Space
Section 34.5. Allocating IP Subnets
Section 34.6. IP Subnetting Made Easy
Chapter 35. Network Time Protocol
Section 35.1. What Is Accurate Time?
Section 35.2. NTP Design
Section 35.3. Configuring NTP
Chapter 36. Failures
Section 36.1. Human Error
Section 36.2. Multiple Component Failure
Section 36.3. Disaster Chains
Section 36.4. No Failover Testing
Section 36.5. Troubleshooting
Chapter 37. GAD's Maxims
Section 37.1. Maxim #1
Section 37.2. Maxim #2
Section 37.3. Maxim #3
Chapter 38. Avoiding Frustration
Section 38.1. Why Everything Is Messed Up
Section 38.2. How to Sell Your Ideas to Management
Section 38.3. When to Upgrade and Why
Section 38.4. Why Change Control Is Your Friend
Section 38.5. How Not to Be a Computer Jerk

Product Details

* ISBN: 0596101511
* ISBN-13: 9780596101510
* Format: Paperback, 576pp
* Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Incorporated
* Pub. Date: June 2007
* Sales Rank: 24,205

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PDF File OReilly.Network.Warrior.pdf6.31 MB

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