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Cisco Router Handbook

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ISBN-10: 0072127562

ISBN-13: 9780072127560

Edition: 2nd 2001

Authors: George Sackett

List price: $70.00
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This is a complete guide to Cisco Routers with more than 500 possible configurations defined, analyzed and described and it also features more than 200 troubleshooting and repairing tips and techniques.
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Book details

List price: $70.00
Edition: 2nd
Copyright year: 2001
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Osborne
Publication date: 12/12/2000
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 990
Size: 7.25" wide x 9.25" long x 2.50" tall
Weight: 4.796
Language: English

Forewordp. xxix
Cisco IOS Softwarep. 1
Benefitsp. 2
Packagingp. 6
Features Supportedp. 7
Cisco Router Hardwarep. 23
Cisco Router Network Hierarchyp. 24
Online Insertion and Removal (OIR)p. 28
Cisco 12000 Seriesp. 29
Cisco 7500 Seriesp. 43
7200 Seriesp. 49
7000 Seriesp. 52
Cisco 7x00 Series Port and Service Adaptersp. 68
4000 Seriesp. 78
3600 Seriesp. 81
2600 Seriesp. 91
1600 Seriesp. 105
700M Family of Access Routersp. 108
Cisco Router Network Designp. 113
The NetworkInfrastructure Lifecyclep. 115
Design Criteriap. 118
Network Devices and Capabilitiesp. 127
Selecting Routing Protocolp. 136
IP Routing Protocol Designp. 143
RIP, RIP2, and IGRP Network Designp. 145
EIGRP Network Designp. 148
OSPF Network Designp. 152
Frame Relay Network Designp. 161
Hierarchical Design of Frame Relay Internetworksp. 162
Frame Relay Network Topologyp. 165
Broadcast Traffic Issuesp. 171
Performance Considerationsp. 171
SNA Supportp. 175
ATM Internetworking Designp. 181
LAN Emulation (LANE)p. 182
Data Exchange Interface (DXI)p. 192
Classical IPp. 193
Multiprotocol over ATM (MPOA)p. 194
Bandwidth Support on Routersp. 197
Configurable Traffic Parametersp. 198
Switched LAN Designp. 199
Switched LAN Factorsp. 200
Cisco VLAN Implementation Supportp. 202
Switched LAN Topologiesp. 210
SRB/RSRB Network Designp. 215
Steps to Effective SRB Designp. 216
Typical SRB Topologiesp. 219
Virtual Ring Conceptp. 224
Proxy Explorerp. 229
NetBIOS Broadcast Controlp. 230
Remote SRB Encapsulation Techniquesp. 233
Parallel WAN Link Issuesp. 236
IP Routing Protocols and SRBp. 240
Queuing and Prioritizationp. 242
DLSw+ Network Designp. 245
DLSw Standardp. 246
Cisco DLSw+p. 250
Cisco DLSw+ Transportp. 256
Cisco's Enhanced Modes of Operationp. 259
Availability Configurationsp. 261
Performance Featuresp. 265
APPN Network Designp. 269
Cisco Support of APPNp. 272
Deciding Factors on Using APPNp. 273
Dependent Logical Unit Requester/Serverp. 277
Network Node Placementp. 277
Performance Considerationsp. 278
Recovery Techniquesp. 286
Queuing and Prioritizationp. 289
APPN Buffer and Memory Managementp. 289
ISDN and Dial-On-Demand Routing (DDR) Designp. 293
Site Optionsp. 294
Central Office Switch Considerationsp. 295
PRI and BRIp. 297
DDR Modelp. 298
DDR Dialer Cloudp. 299
IP Addressingp. 300
Topologyp. 300
Dial Service Considerationsp. 302
Routing Packetsp. 305
DDR as Dial Backupp. 309
Connection Triggeringp. 309
Securityp. 313
Preparing the Cisco Routerp. 315
Determining the Proper IOS Codep. 316
Locate IOS Using Cisco Connection Online (CCO)p. 319
Loading IOS on the Routerp. 321
Loading CIP or CPA Microcode on a Cisco 7000/7200/7500 Routerp. 328
Router Basic Configuration and IOS Commandsp. 333
IP Configurationp. 349
Defining Subnets on the Router Interfacesp. 350
IP Address Mappingp. 359
Enabling the Use of IP Host Names in Cisco IOS Commandsp. 363
Disable IP Routingp. 366
Bridging IP, Instead of Routing IPp. 369
Controlling and Managing Broadcast Packetsp. 370
Configure IP Servicesp. 373
Filter IP Packets Using Access Listsp. 376
Fault-Tolerant Routing of IP Packetsp. 390
IP Performance Tuningp. 396
Performance Enhancements Through Switching Featuresp. 398
Defining RIP Routing Protocolp. 405
The Basics of RIPp. 406
Why Use RIP as the Routing Protocol?p. 407
Defining RIP as a Routing Protocol on the Routerp. 408
Allow Point-to-Point (NBMA) Updates for RIPp. 411
Specifying the Version of RIPp. 416
Enabling RIP Version 2 Authenticationp. 419
Disable RIP Version 2 Route Summarizationp. 423
Disabling the Validation of Source IP Addressesp. 426
Reducing Routing Loops with Split-horizonp. 428
Tuning RIP Update Packet Delaysp. 428
RIP Updates and the Affect on Bandwidthp. 429
Configuring IGRP Routing Protocolp. 431
Managing IGRP Updates and Route Advertisementsp. 433
Defining IGRP as a Routing Processp. 437
Using Unicast IGRP Routing Updatesp. 441
Increasing Throughput and Reliability Using Unequal-Cost Pathsp. 445
Altering IGRP Routing and Metric Computationsp. 447
Decreasing IGRP Route Convergencep. 451
Tuning IGRP Route Convergencep. 453
Controlling the Logical Size of an IGRP Networkp. 454
Validate Source IP Addressesp. 455
IGRP Updates and the Affect on Bandwidthp. 456
Configuring Enhanced IGRP (EIGRP) Routing Protocolp. 459
Enable EIGRP as a Routing Protocolp. 461
Migrating to EIGRP from IGRPp. 465
Monitoring Neighbor Adjacency Changesp. 467
Managing EIGRP Bandwidth Utilizationp. 469
Modifying EIGRP Metric Weightsp. 472
Routing Between Disconnected Networks with EIGRPp. 476
Summarizing Routes for Advertisements out Specific Interfacesp. 478
Tuning Hello Packet and the Hold Time intervalsp. 479
Split-Horizon and EIGRPp. 481
MD5 Authentication with EIGRPp. 482
Configuring OSPF Routing Protocolp. 487
OSPF with Cisco IOSp. 490
Specifying OSPF on Cisco Routersp. 491
Multi-Area OSPF Networksp. 500
Stub, Totally Stubby, and Not-So-Stubby-Area (NSSA) OSPF Areasp. 507
Using OSPF Virtual Linksp. 514
Non-Broadcast and Broadcast Network Configurationsp. 517
Configuring BGP Routing Protocolp. 525
Exterior and Interior BGP Sessionsp. 527
Path Selection Under BGPp. 529
Defining the BGP Processp. 530
Route Redistributionp. 593
Understanding Route Redistributionp. 594
Selecting the Best Path Based on a Routing Protocolp. 598
Redistribution Examplesp. 606
Defining ATM (LANE, Classical IP, and MPOA)p. 619
Configuring LANEp. 620
Configure ATM over a Serial Interfacep. 638
Configuring Classical IPp. 640
Configuring Multiprotocol over ATM (MPOA)p. 644
Defining Frame Relayp. 655
A Simple Frame Relay Configurationp. 656
Dynamic and Static Addressingp. 659
Frame Relay Subinterfacesp. 664
Hub and Spoke Configurationsp. 670
Traffic Shaping on Frame Relayp. 674
Transparent Bridgingp. 678
Managing Performance Problems Using the Broadcast Queuep. 681
Internet-working Legacy Systemsp. 683
Serial Tunneling (STUN)p. 685
Source-Route Bridging Configurationp. 695
Data Link Switching Configuration Plus (DLSw+)p. 704
SDLC to LLC2 (SDLLC)p. 722
Frame Relay BNN and BAN Connectivityp. 731
APPN Support on Cisco Routersp. 741
SNA Support Using a Channel-Attached Cisco Routerp. 750
IP Connectivity Using a Channel-Attached Cisco Routerp. 761
Defining Novell Networksp. 765
IPX Processingp. 766
Routing IPXp. 769
IPX Route Redistributionp. 792
Bridging IPXp. 793
Configuring ISDNp. 797
Configuring BRI Servicep. 798
Configuring Primary Rate Interface (PRI) Servicep. 802
Dial-On-Demand routing (DDR) with ISDNp. 805
Using Caller IDp. 809
ISDN Callbackp. 810
SNAPSHOT Routing with ISDNp. 812
Using ISDN for dial backupp. 817
Appendix Ap. 821
Appendix Bp. 827
Appendix Cp. 831
Appendix Dp. 833
Glossaryp. 837
Indexp. 873
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.