CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH)

  • Published: Dec 6, 2004
  • Copyright 2005
  • Dimensions: 7-3/8" x 9-1/8"
  • Pages: 696
  • Edition: 1st
  • Book
  • ISBN-10: 1-58705-185-0
  • ISBN-13: 978-1-58705-185-2
  • eBook (Watermarked)
  • ISBN-10: 1-58705-393-4
  • ISBN-13: 978-1-58705-393-1

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Product Description

A new edition of this title is available, ISBN-10: 1587055740 ISBN-13: 9781587055744

 

Cisco authorized self-study book for CCDP® 642-871 architectures foundation learning

 

Prepare for the CCDP ARCH exam 642-871 with the Cisco authorized self-study guide. This book teaches you how to:

  • Understand the composition and deployment of the Cisco AVVID framework in network design
  • Understand the composition and role of the Enterprise Composite Network Model in enterprise network design
  • Design enterprise campus networks and their edge network connectivity to the Internet
  • Understand and implement network management solutions in the network
  • Integrate new technologies designed to enhance network performance and availability in the enterprise, such as high availability, QoS, multicasting, and storage and content networking
  • Design and implement appropriate security solutions for enterprise networks
  • Deploy wireless technologies within the enterprise
  • Implement and design IP telephony solutions for the enterprise network

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) is a Cisco® authorized self-paced learning tool. By presenting a structured format for the conceptual and intermediate design of AVVID network infrastructures, this book teaches you how to design solutions that scale from small to large enterprise networks and take advantage of the latest technologies. Whether you are preparing for the CCDP® certification or simply want to gain a better understanding of how to architect network solutions over intelligent network services to achieve effective performance, scalability, and availability, you will benefit from the foundation information presented in this book.

 

This comprehensive book provides detailed information and easy-to-grasp tutorials on a broad range of topics related to architecture and design, including security, fine-tuning routing protocols, switching structures, and IP multicasting. To keep pace with the Cisco technological developments and new product offerings, this study guide includes coverage of wireless networking, the SAFE Blueprint, content networking, storage networking, quality of service (QoS), IP telephony, network management, and high availability networks. Design examples and sample verification output demonstrate implementation techniques. Configuration exercises, which appear in every chapter, provide a practical review of key concepts to discuss critical issues surrounding network operation. Chapter-ending review questions illustrate and help solidify the concepts presented in this book.

 

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) is part of a recommended learning path from Cisco Systems® that includes simulation and hands-on training from authorized Cisco Learning Partners and self-study products from Cisco Press. To find out more about instructor-led training, e-learning, and hands-on instruction offered by authorized Cisco Learning Partners worldwide, please visit www.cisco.com/go/authorizedtraining.

 

This volume is in the Certification Self-Study Series offered by Cisco Press®. Books in this series provide officially developed training solutions to help networking professionals understand technology implementations and prepare for the Cisco Career Certifications examinations.

 

Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Overview of Cisco Enterprise Services and Solutions, January 16, 2005
By 
A. Sardella (Sunnyvale, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) (Hardcover)
CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures by Keith Hutton and Amir Ranjbar (Cisco Press, 2005) covers all the topics for the CCDP ARCH (642-871) in the right level of detail. Having taken the exam within the last year, I can tell that it meets the exam objectives and does an excellent job of providing a framework to help you learn the services and solutions covered in the exam.

The CCDP went through an appropriate overhaul in 2003. It is now tied much more to modern technologies and to design principles based on the AVVID architecture and the Enterprise Composite Network Model (ECNM). This book introduces all the functional areas of the ECNM in the first chapter and continues to refer to these areas and their constituent modules as it delves more deeply (in later chapters) into the services and solutions of AVVID.

Of all the Cisco certifications, I think the CCDP gives you the best overall picture of what's happening in enterprise networking today... Read more
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, January 22, 2005
This review is from: CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) (Hardcover)
In my opinion this book is most helpful preparation tool for Cisco CCDP ARCH exam. It covers all you need to pass that exam. Mr Ranjbar did good job and for me he recovered his good name after Self-study CCNP: CIT book.

Must have !
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Very thorough, covered nearly everything, December 13, 2005
By 
Chris M. Schock (Parker, CO) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) (Hardcover)
I used this book in preparation for the Cisco CCDP ARCH exam. It was a very helpful resource. The book focuses on concepts and methods, which is perfectly in-line with the exam content.

Overall the book is well written and I give kudos to the author for his ability to explain complex topics. The section on PIM sparse-mode was exceptional. Each chapter concludes with a real world example that helps illustrate the finer points.

Compared to the poor editing of the other Cisco books, this is definitely 5 stars. There are refreshingly few errors in this book.

Since you are likely buying this book to take the CCDP ARCH exam, I will also suggest complementing it with the BOSON CCDP practice questions. These two resources were the sum total of materials I used to pass the exam. There were only one or two questions that I don't recall the book covering.

Good luck!
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Praise For CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH)

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH)
Reviewer Name: Alan Sardella
Reviewer Certification: CCDP
Rating: ***** out of *****

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH) by Keith Hutton and Amir Ranjbar covers all the topics for the CCDP ARCH (642-871) in the right level of detail. Having taken the exam within the last year, I can tell that it meets the exam objectives and does an excellent job of providing a framework to help you learn the services and solutions covered in the exam.

The CCDP went through an appropriate overhaul in 2003. It is now tied much more to modern technologies and to design principles based on the AVVID architecture and the Enterprise Composite Network Model (ECNM). This book introduces all the functional areas of the ECNM in the first chapter and continues to refer to these areas and their constituent modules as it delves more deeply (in later chapters) into the services and solutions of AVVID.

Of all the Cisco certifications, I think the CCDP gives you the best overall picture of what’s happening in enterprise networking today. You won’t get near enough depth for the CCIE, but you get a decent exposure to all the major solutions (such as content, wireless, telephony, storage, and VPNs) and the underlying services (such as network management, security, multicast, high availability, QoS) that make up the architecture of Cisco’s offerings.

This book covers all of these topics in the right level of detail for CCDP ARCH. In addition, it relates the corresponding products to these services and solutions, so that you have a good sense of how to fit all this together when you’re in the field. The network diagrams and other illustrations are clear and detailed, and there are numerous tables summarizing the often-copious amounts of information. The questions and answers at the end of each chapter seemed to be at the appropriate level of detail and were in line with the level of difficulty of the exam question in ARCH.

I also liked the fact that at the end of each chapter the book provides a nice summary of the Cisco products relating to each service or solution. While typically beyond the scope of this exam, this will give you a deeper understanding of how to help your customers choose the right products to meet their needs. A running case study of a hypothetical company going through a network upgrade is also updated at the end of each chapter; a careful look at the ongoing saga of the OCSIC Bottling Company will not only improve your applied knowledge in general, but will also help you with the (I thought) tough case study testlet in the ARCH exam.

The difficulty that authors face in putting together a book like this lies in the dynamic nature of the technology and the potential of it to change for the exam. I noticed a few minor flaws along these lines in terms of discussing products or solutions (such as CD One and the nGenius RTM), which are end of life. For this reason, it’s a good idea to complement your test preparation with a review on CCO of any solutions you think might fall into this category. I also recall there were some telephony concepts, such as dial patterns, covered on the exam but not discussed in the book. If you peruse the SRND guides on Cisco’s website for topics such as storage, wireless, VPN, content, and telephony, while keeping the exam objectives (listed on Cisco’s website) in the back of your mind, you should be able to make up for these minor omissions.

I would also recommend some final preparation with the CCDA/CCDP Flash Cards and Exam Practice Pack. This book contains some excellent summary sheets that follow the same structure as this self-study guide.

Overall, I would give this book 5 stars, and I believe you can use it as both your main preparation tool for the CCDP ARCH exam and as a field reference for your consulting services.

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures (ARCH)
Reviewer Name: John Ainsworth, Network Administrator
Reviewer Certification: CCNP
Rating: ***** out of *****

If you are preparing for the CCDP exam 642-871, CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures is a must have. This self-study guide covers all the objectives and should be read early and often throughout the preparation for the exam. While reading a manual like this will not replace experience or an instructor led course, it will help you master the concepts. One of the overwhelming problems of preparing for a Cisco exam is the breadth of the subject matter to be covered. A book that is well outlined like Designing Cisco Network Architectures is necessary to grasp all of the topics.

This book is geared toward the intermediate level student and assumes some basic knowledge of networking and Cisco devices, but not much more. There is a helpful glossary in the back to assist with terminology. Anyone who designs networks will find the book useful, but I give it a five star rating primarily with exam preparation in mind, which is its claim.

There are 13 chapters but no units, so one can pick and choose which chapter to read, in any order. Except for the first chapter, which is an introduction to the Cisco network model, the chapters can stand on their own as a single treatise. The layout includes a balance of text, diagrams, and charts. So that learning is enhanced and the reader's attention is maintained. Besides a summary, there is a product summary at the end of each chapter. This is a resource for understanding which Cisco equipment fits the designs discussed. Woven through each chapter ending is a case study of a fictional company that gives problems, goals and solutions. Finally—a plus for any exam preparation volume—there are review questions with the answers in the appendix.

CCDP Self-Study: Designing Cisco Network Architectures has some business value as well. I have recently consulted it in the planning and evaluation of VLANs and an Internet edge network. The book is geared toward the "Cisco solution." Although, recently published, it does not cover the new multi-functional routers such as the 2801. But all of the design concepts of the latest networks are covered and the best equipment for each job is determined.

Index

Download - 844 KB -- Index

Table of Contents

Introduction.

1. Introducing Cisco Network Service Architectures.

    Primary Concerns of Network Deployment

      Performance

      Scalability

      Availability

    Cisco AVVID Framework

      Cisco AVVID Common Network Infrastructure

      Cisco AVVID Intelligent Network Services

      Cisco AVVID Network Solutions

    Enterprise Composite Network Model

      Enterprise Campus Functional Area

      Campus Infrastructure Module

      Network Management Module

      Server Farm Module

      Edge Distribution Module

    Effects of the Enterprise Campus Functional Area on the Enterprise Network

      Enterprise Edge Functional Area

      E-Commerce Module

      Internet Connectivity Module

      Remote Access and VPN Module

      WAN Module

    Effects of the Enterprise Edge Functional Area on the Enterprise Network

      Service Provider Edge Functional Area

      Summary

      References

      Product Summary

      Review Questions

2. Designing Enterprise Campus Networks.

    Enterprise Network Design Methodology

      Campus Design Within the Enterprise Composite Network Model

      Typical Requirements for an Enterprise Campus Network

      Enterprise Campus Design Methodology

      Analyzing Network Traffic Patterns

    Designing the Campus Infrastructure

      Designing the Logical Campus Network

      One VLAN Per Switch

      Unique VLANs Per Switch

      VLANs Spanning Multiple Access Switches

    Designing the Physical Campus Network

      Selecting Transmission Media and Data-Link Protocols

      Selecting a Physical Network Segmentation Strategy

      Selecting and Implementing Spanning Tree Protocol

    Selecting Data Link or Multilayer Switching Solutions

      Small Campus Network

      Medium Campus Network

      Multilayer Switched Campus Backbone

    Selecting Cisco Hardware and Software

    Identifying an IP Addressing Strategy

    Selecting Routing Protocols

      Static Versus Dynamic Routing

      RIP and RIPv2

      IGRP

      EIGRP

      OSPF

      IS-IS

    Selecting Areas for Networks

    Enterprise Campus Design Examples

      Small Enterprise Design Example

      Medium Enterprise Design Example

      Large Enterprise Design Example

    Designing the Server Farm

      Design Objectives for the Server Farm

      Server Farm Infrastructure Architecture

      Designing the Server Farm for Scalability

      Considerations for Server Farm Security and Manageability

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specifications Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      Background

      Business Goals of OCSIC

      Headquarters Location, Network, and Applications

      North American Plants and Their Applications

      Networking Strategies and Goals

      Proposed Headquarters Campus Network Solution

      Proposed Headquarters Server Farm Solution

      Proposed North American Plan Model

3. Designing Enterprise Edge Connectivity.

    Reviewing the Enterprise Edge Network Design Methodology

      Enterprise Edge Design

      Typical Requirements for the Enterprise Edge

      Enterprise Edge Design Methodology

      Analyzing Network Traffic Patterns

    Designing the Classic WAN Module

      Enterprise Needs for the WAN

      Selecting the WAN Topology

      Branch Office WAN

      Regional Office WAN

      Enterprise WAN Backbone

      Selecting a Service Provider

      Selecting the Data-Link Layer

      Selecting the Physical Layer

      Selecting WAN Features

      Selecting Cisco Edge Routing Solutions

      Routing Protocol and IP Addressing Considerations

      An Enterprise WAN Design Example

    Designing the Remote Access Module

      Enterprise Needs for Remote Access

      Selecting the Remote Access Type and Termination

      Selecting the Remote Access Physical Connectivity

      Selecting the Remote Access Protocol

      Selecting Cisco Access Routing Solutions

      Sizing the Central Site Remote Access Connection

      An Enterprise Remote Access Design Example

    Designing the Internet Connectivity Module

      Enterprise Requirements for the Internet

      Using NAT at the Enterprise Edge

      Designing ISP Connectivity Solutions

      Internet Connectivity Design Example

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specifications Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      North American Plant Headquarters WAN

      Remote Access and Internet Connectivity Requirements

      International Manufacturing, Distribution, and Sales Plants

      International Plant Networks and Applications

      WAN Module Design

      Remote Access Design

      Internet Connectivity Module Design

4. Designing Network Management Services.

    Developing an Enterprise Network Management Strategy

      Functional Areas of Network Management

      FCAPS

      Network Management Policies and Procedures

      Policies

      Procedures

      Network Management Methods

      Reactive-Event Driven

      Proactive-Polling and Event Driven

      Network Management Strategy Process

      Network Management Module Functions

      Cisco Network Management Strategy

    CiscoWorks

      CiscoWorks Common Management Foundation

      CiscoWorks LAN Management Solution

      Best Practices for Managing the LAN Using LMS

      CiscoWorks Routed WAN Management Solution

      Best Practices for Managing the WAN Using RWAN

    Designing the Network Management Architecture

    Network Management Design Considerations

      Network Management Infrastructure Considerations

      Network Management Data Collection and Management Considerations

      Network Management Station Sizing Considerations

      System Management Resource Considerations

    Network Management Deployment Recommendations

      Single Server Deployment

      Multiserver, Split Applications-Single Management Domain

      Multiple Management Domains

      Centralized WAN Management with LAN Management

      Key Questions to Consider

      Availability Manager Issues

    Network Management Design Scenarios

      Small Site Network Management Design Scenario

      Medium Site Network Management Design Scenario

      Large Site Network Management Design Scenario

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

5. Designing High-Availability Services.

    High-Availability Features and Options

      Network Requirements for High Availability

      Cisco IOS High-Availability Architecture

      Fault Tolerance and Hardware Redundancy

      Using Fault-Tolerant Devices

      Providing Redundancy in the Network Topology

      Route Processor Redundancy

      Network Interface Card Redundancy

      Options for Layer 3 Redundancy

      Redundancy and Spanning Tree Protocol

      PortFast and UplinkFast

    Designing High-Availability Enterprise Networks

      Design Guidelines for High Availability

      Redundancy Options

      Software Features and Protocol Attributes

      Carrier and Circuit Types

      Power Availability

      High-Availability Design Goals and Conclusions

      Best Practices for High-Availability Network Design

      Enterprise Campus Design Guidelines for High Availability

      Enterprise Edge Design Guidelines for High Availability

      High-Availability Design Example

    Summary

    Reference

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specifications Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      High-Availability Design for the Campus Infrastructure Module

      High-Availability Strategy for the Server Farm Module

      High-Availability Strategy for the WAN Module

      High-Availability Strategy for the Remote Access Module

      High-Availability Strategy for the Internet Connectivity Module

      Revised Network Diagrams

6. Designing Security Services.

    Evaluating Network Security Policies

      Network Vulnerabilities

      Defining a Security Policy

      Network Security as a Process

      Securing the Network

      Monitoring Security

      Testing Security

      Improving Security

      Risk Assessment and Management

    Reviewing Cisco Security Solutions

      Key Elements of Network Security

      Network Security Attack Types and Their Solutions

      Packet Sniffers

      IP Spoofing

      DoS Attacks

      Password Attacks

      Man-in-the-Middle Attacks

      Application Layer Attacks

      Network Reconnaissance

      Trust Exploitation

      Port Redirection Attacks

      Unauthorized Access Attacks

      Viruses and Trojan Horses

      Firewall Design Options

      Implementing a Perimeter LAN

      Firewall Filtering Rules

      Perimeter Security: PIX Firewall

      Perimeter Security: IOS Firewall

      Intrusion Detection System Design Options

      IDS Operation

      IDS Deployment

      Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting

      RADIUS

      TACACS+

      Kerberos

      Public Key Infrastructure

      IP Security

      Internet Key Exchange

      Authentication Header

      Encapsulating Security Payload

      Device Security Options

      Routers

      Switches

      Hosts

      Network-Wide

      Applications

    Implementing Network Security Using the Cisco SAFE Security Blueprints

      Introduction to Cisco SAFE Architecture

      SAFE Security Strategies for Small Networks

      Small Network Internet Connectivity Module

      Small Network Campus Infrastructure Module

      SAFE Security Strategies for Medium Networks

      Medium Network Internet Connectivity

      Medium Network Campus Infrastructure Module

      Medium Network WAN Module

      SAFE Security Strategies for Large Networks

      Campus Infrastructure Module

      Secure Network Management Module

      Secure Server Farm Module

      Secure Edge Distribution Module

      SAFE Security Strategies for the Enterprise Edge

      E-Commerce Module

      Internet Connectivity Module

      Remote Access and VPN Module

      WAN Module Features

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

7. Designing QoS.

    Identifying QoS Mechanisms

      Enterprise Network Requirements for QoS

      Delay

      Delay Variation

      Packet Loss

      QoS-Enabled Network

      QoS Architectures

      IntServ

      DiffServ

      QoS Service Levels

      Classification and Marking

      Congestion Avoidance

      Congestion Management

      Traffic Conditioning

      CAR: Managing Access Bandwidth Policy and Performing Policing

      Traffic Shaping: Controlling Outbound Traffic Flow

      Signaling

      Link-Efficiency Mechanisms

      LFI

      cRTP and dcRTP

      Summary of Key Cisco IOS Software QoS Categories and Features

    Designing QoS for Enterprise Networks

      QoS Design Guidelines

      QoS Design Guidelines for Data

      QoS Design Guidelines for Voice

      QoS Design Guidelines for Video Conferencing

      Designing QoS for the Enterprise Network

      Example: QoS Solution

    Summary

    Reference

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specifications Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      QoS Design for the Site-to-Site WAN

      QoS Design for the Campus Infrastructure Module

8. Designing IP Multicast Services.

    Examining IP Multicast Services

      IP Multicast Basics

      IP Multicast Data-Delivery Principles

      Multicast Forwarding

      IP Multicast Group Membership and Distribution Trees

      Source Trees

      Shared Trees

      Comparison of Source Trees and Shared Trees

      Protocol Independent Multicast

      PIM Dense Mode

      PIM Sparse Mode

      Sparse Mode, Dense Mode, and Sparse-Dense Mode

      IP Multicast Control Mechanisms

      IGMP

      CGMP and IGMP Snooping

      Designing IP Multicast Solutions for Enterprise Networks

      IP Multicast Design Considerations for an Enterprise Campus

    Designing IP Multicast for a Small Campus

      Designing IP Multicast for a Large Enterprise Campus

      Designing IP Multicast Over a WAN

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specifications Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      IP Multicast Design for OCSIC's New Application

9. Designing Virtual Private Networks.

    VPN Technologies

      Enterprise VPN Requirements

      VPN Tunneling

      VPN Security

      IPSec

      User Authentication

      Encryption

      VPN Termination

      VPN Concentrators

      VPN Client Software

      VPN Management

      VPN Management Considerations

      CiscoWorks VPN/Security Management Solution

    Designing Site-to-Site VPNs

      Site-to-Site VPN Requirements

      Key Design Considerations for Site-to-Site VPNs

      Hub-and-Spoke VPN Topologies

      Simple Full-Mesh VPN Topology

      Hierarchical VPN Topology

      High-Availability and Resiliency Considerations

      Using a Routing Protocol over the VPN

      Minimizing Packet Fragmentation

      Implementing IPSec

      Site-to-Site VPN Examples

      Example: Small Site-to-Site VPN

      Small Site-to-Site VPN Solution

      Example: Large Site-to-Site VPN

      Large Site-to-Site VPN Solution

    Designing Remote-Access VPNs

      Remote-Access VPN Requirements

      Remote-Access VPN Design Considerations

      Broadband Access Design Considerations

      Capacity Planning for Remote-Access VPNs

      NAT Issues

      One-to-One Translation

      Many-to-One Translation

      NAT Traversal

      VPN Split-Tunnel Communication

      Remote-Access VPN Examples

      Example: Small Remote-Access VPN

      Small Remote-Access VPN Solution

      Example: Large Remote-Access VPN

      Large Remote-Access VPN Solution

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

      Site-to-Site VPN Solution

      Remote-Access VPN Solution

      Revised Network Diagrams

10. Designing Enterprise Wireless Networks.

    Reviewing the Wireless LAN Solution

      Emerging Wireless Enterprise Network Needs

      Wireless Communication Architecture

      Access Point Coverage

      Cell Distribution

      802.11 Standards

      Cisco Wireless Solutions

      Access Points and Client Adapters

      Workgroup Bridges

      Wireless Bridges

      Antennas

    Designing WLANs for Enhanced Enterprise Communications

      Enterprise WLAN Design Considerations

      WLAN Data Rates

      Client Density and Throughput

      WLAN Coverage

      RF Environment

      Channel Selection

      Access-Point Placement and Number

      Inline Power

      VLANs

      IP Addressing

      Infrastructure Availability

      Back-End System Availability

      Access-Point Hot Standby Redundancy

      Roaming

      Multicast

      QoS

      WLAN Security Design Considerations

      WLAN Security Extension-EAP

      WLAN LAN Extension-IPSec

      WLAN Static WEP

      Security Extension Comparison

      Cisco EAP

      Attack Mitigation Using EAP Authentication

      Attack Mitigation Using IPSec

      Small Office WLAN Design Model

      Enterprise WLAN Design Model

      Example: Enterprise WLAN Site Design

      Example: Enterprise WLAN Remote Office Design

      Remote-Access and Telecommuter WLAN Design Models

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

11. Designing IP Telephony Solutions.

    Reviewing the Cisco IP Telephony Solution

      Introducing the Cisco IP Telephony Solution

      Cisco CallManager

      Gateways and Control Protocols

      Transcoders and Conferencing

      Hardware Support

      Unicast Conference Bridge

      Cisco IP Telephony Applications

    Designing a Network for Cisco IP Telephony

      Cisco CallManager Cluster Design Considerations

      Cluster Deployment Guidelines

      Cluster Design

      Designing Single-Site IP Telephony Solutions

      Example: Single-Site

      Single-Site Solution

      Designing Multisite with Centralized Call Processing IP Telephony Solutions

      Designing Multisite with Distributed Call Processing IP Telephony Solutions

      Example: Distributed Call Processing

      Distributed Call Processing Solution

      Clustering over the IP WAN

      Local Failover

      Remote Failover

      Network Infrastructure Design Considerations

      Layer 2 Voice Transport

      VoIP over Leased Lines

      Voice over Frame Relay

      Voice over ATM

      Network Bandwidth Provisioning

      Provisioning for Voice Bearer Traffic

      Provisioning for Call Control Traffic

      Traffic Engineering

      Dial Plan Design Considerations

      Intelligent Network Services for IP Telephony and Voice

      IP Telephony Network Management Tools

      High Availability

      Voice Security

      QoS Design Considerations

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

12. Designing Content Networking Solutions.

    Reviewing the Content Networking Solution

      Enterprise Content Networking Requirements

      Content Networking Architecture

      Content Caching

      Transparent Caching Deployment

      Proxy Caching Deployment

      Reverse Proxy Caching Deployment

      Content Switching

      Content Routing

      Direct Mode Content Routing

      WCCP Mode Content Routing

      Content Distribution and Management

      Intelligent Network Services Integration

    Designing Content Networking Solutions

      Content Networking Design Considerations

      Content Networking Solutions for Web Content Delivery

      Example: Web Content Delivery

      Web Content Delivery Solution

      Content Networking Solutions for E-Commerce

      Example: E-Commerce

      E-Commerce Solution

      Content Networking Solutions for Streaming Media

      Example: Streaming Media

      Streaming Media Solution

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

13. Designing Storage Networking Solutions.

    Reviewing the Cisco Storage Networking Solution

      Enterprise Needs for Storage Networking

      Storage Consolidation

      Business Continuance and Backup

      Cisco Storage Networking Architecture

      Network Storage Models

      SANs

      Network-Attached Storage

      Network Technology Enablers for Storage Networks

      iSCSI

      FCIP

      Intelligent Network Services for Storage Networking

    Designing a Storage Networking Architecture with IP Access

      Designing a Storage Networking Architecture

      IP Access to Storage

      Example: IP Access to Storage

      IP Access to Storage Solution

      Storage over WAN

      Example: Storage over WAN

      Storage over WAN Solution

      Example: Storage over Optical Metro

      Storage over Optical Metro Solution

      Network-Attached Storage Model

      Example: Network-Attached Storage

      Network-Attached Storage Solution

    Summary

    References

    Product Summary

    Standards and Specification Summary

    Review Questions

    Case Study: OCSIC Bottling Company

Appendix A. Answers to Review Questions.

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

Glossary.

Index.

Downloadable Sample Chapter

Download - 388 KB -- Chapter 5: Designing High-Availability Services

Errata

Errata -- 25 KB

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