Summary
Learn Cisco Network Administration in a Month of Lunches is a tutorial designed for beginners who want to learn how to administer Cisco switches and routers. Just set aside one hour a day (lunchtime would be perfect) for a month, and you'll start learning practical Cisco Network administration skills faster than you ever thought possible.
Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications.
About the Technology
Cisco's ultrareliable routers and switches are the backbone of millions of networks, but "set and forget" is not an acceptable attitude. Fortunately, you don't have to be an old-time administrator to set up and maintain a Cisco-based network. With a handful of techniques, a little practice, and this book, you can keep your system in top shape.
About the Book
Learn Cisco Network Administration in a Month of Lunches is designed for occasional and full-time network administrators using Cisco hardware. In 22 bite-sized lessons, you'll learn practical techniques for setting up a Cisco network and making sure that it never fails. Real-world labs start with configuring your first switch and guide you through essential commands, protocols, dynamic routing tricks, and more.
What's Inside
Understand your Cisco network, including the difference between routers and switches
Configure VLANs and VLAN trunks
Secure your network
Connect and configure routers and switches
Establish good maintenance habits
About the Reader
This book is written for readers with no previous experience with Cisco networking.
About the Author
Ben Piper is an IT consultant who holds numerous Cisco, Citrix, and Microsoft certifications including the Cisco CCNA and CCNP. He has created many video courses on networking, Cisco CCNP certification, Puppet, and Windows Server Administration.
Table of Contents
Before you begin
What is a Cisco network?
A crash course on Cisco's Internetwork Operating System
Managing switch ports
Securing ports by using the Port Security feature
Managing virtual LANs (VLANs)
Breaking the VLAN barrier by using switched virtual interfaces
IP address assignment by using Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
Securing the network by using IP access control lists
Connecting switches using trunk links
Automatically configuring VLANs using the VLAN Trunking Protocol
Protecting against bridging loops by using the Spanning Tree Protocol
Optimizing network performance by using port channels
Making the network scalable by connecting routers and switches together
Manually directing traffic using the IP routing table
A dynamic routing protocols crash course
Tracking down devices
Securing Cisco devices
Facilitating troubleshooting using logging and debugging
Recovering from disaster
Performance and health checklist
Next steps
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