From: kym blair (kymblair@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Sep 06 2001 - 10:02:00 GMT-3
Steve,
Also Doyle's Routing TCP/IP Volume II is excellent on BGP. Surprisingly, it
has a lot of typos, but his style progressively leads you through BGP.
Halabi and Doyle are both excellent; since they have different styles of
teaching, it is worth reading both and doing the examples they present.
Third, Parkhurst's Cisco BGP-4 Command and Configuration Handbook is a great
follow-up after you've done the other two. Parkhurst goes through each
command, (i.e., a command reference book). He doesn't teach BGP like the
first two, but covers the little forgotten commands that make sense after
you've studied the first two books. Parkhurst repeats basic paragraphs for
each command, so you can go through his book quickly. It will really round
out your BGP knowledge.
Kym
>From: Jason Sinclair <sinclairj@powertel.com.au>
>Reply-To: Jason Sinclair <sinclairj@powertel.com.au>
>To: "'Steve Barone'" <steve@chetona.com>, ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: RE: Need BGP Study tip's
>Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2001 09:01:02 +1000
>
>Steve,
>
>Go to http://www.fatkid.com <http://www.fatkid.com> and do the BGP labs
>there. That will be a good free start and you will soon see what you know
>and don't know. Then I would recommend the Halabi "Internet Routing
>Architectures" Cisco Press book. Also go to www.cisco.com
><http://www.cisco.com> and search for BGP tutorial. There is a 5 part
>tutorial which is pretty good as well.
>
>Regards,
>
>Jason Sinclair
>Team Leader - NSG
>POWERTEL Limited
>Level 11, 55 Clarence Street, SYDNEY
>Phone: 61-2-8264-3820
>Mobile: 0416 105 858
>jasons@powertel.net.au
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steve Barone [mailto:steve@chetona.com]
> Sent: Thursday, 6 September 2001 04:56
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: Need BGP Study tip's
>
> Group:
> I am needing to complete the BGP part of my CCIE lab
>preparation,
> however, I have no real world BGP experience or
>troubleshooting skills.
> BGP is also not required for my job, so I basically have 0
>experience.
> Can anyone outline a plan for me to get up to speed enough
>to pass the
> lab? prefereable sample configs, sceanrio's etc. I don't
>have the money
> for the OSPF/BGP cisco class.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Steve
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