RE: Topics to cover

From: Jeff Kesemeyer (jkesemey@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Jan 07 2002 - 19:41:39 GMT-3


   
Here is a list of topics that compiled for study material, let me know
if I left anything out.

Topics that I think are not covered on the R&R CCIE exam but other CCIE
exams are:
        Local Area Mobility
        MPLS
        VPN
        IPSec

I still recommend you study them but not necessarily for the lab.

        Hope this helps with your boredom,

                Jeff Kesemeyer
                CCNP, CCDP, MCSE, CNE
                www.bradshawlabs.com
                "Your CCIE Rack Rental Source"

1. PHYSICAL AND DATA LINK LAYERS 9
1.1. ROUTER MANAGEMENT 9
1.2. ALIASES 10
1.3. IOS FEATURE SETS 12
1.4. BASIC INTERFACE CONFIGURATION 14
1.5. MISCELLANEOUS 15
1.6. NETWORK TIME PROTOCOL (NTP) 17
1.7. HTTP 18
1.8. SNMP 19
1.9. AGGREGATE T1'S AT 19
1.10. AUX 20
1.11. LEVEL ONE TROUBLESHOOTING 21
1.12. ROUTER PASSWORD RECOVERY 25
1.13. SWITCH PASSWORD RECOVERY 26
1.14. ROUTER AS PACKET ANALYZER 26
2. FRAME-RELAY 28
2.1. CONNECTIVITY SCENERIOS 30
2.2. FRAME-RELAY AND OSPF 32
2.3. CONFIGURING FRAME-RELAY 32
2.4. TROUBLESHOOTING FRAME RELAY 34
3. ISDN 36
3.1. LEGACY DDR 43
3.2. DIALER PROFILES 45
3.3. PPP 48
3.3.1. Snapshot Routing 49
3.3.2. Dial Backup 51
3.3.3. OSPF DDR Methods 52
3.3.4. Dialer Watch 53
3.3.5. Callback 55
3.3.6. Floating Static Routes 56
3.3.7. Other ISDN Commands 56
3.4. ISDN TROUBLESHOOTING STRATEGY (MASTER THIS CHECKLIST) 57
3.4.1. Problem Isolation 59
3.4.2. ISDN Debug Example 60
4. LAN SWITCHING 62
4.1. SWITCH MANAGEMENT 64
4.2. PORT PARAMETERS 66
4.3. VLAN'S 68
4.4. TRUNKING 73
4.5. INTER-VLAN ROUTING 76
4.6. TOKEN-RING (3900) CONFIGURATION 77
4.6.1. Token-Ring VLAN's 79
4.7. TROUBLESHOOTING SWITCHES 82
5. ATM 85
5.1. ATM WITH MULTIPROTOCOL ENCAPSULTION (RFC 2684) 87
5.2. CLASSICAL IP (RFC 2225 / 1577) 90
5.4. QOS 93
5.5. NEXT HOP RESOLUTION PROTOCOL (NHRP) 94
6.3. HOT STANDBY ROUTER PROTOCOL (HSRP) 102
6.4. DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM (DNS) 104
6.5. DYNAMIC HOST CONFIGURATION PROTOCOL (DHCP) 104
7. ROUTING 106
7.1. ADMINISTRATIVE DISTANCES 109
7.2. DEFAULT AND STATIC ROUTES 109
7.2.1. RIP 110
7.2.2. IGRP 111
7.2.3. EIGRP 111
7.2.4. OSPF/ ISIS 112
7.2.5. BGP 113
7.2.6. IPX 114
7.3. DEFAULT ROUTE SUMMARIES 114
7.4. AUTHENTICATION 115
7.5. ROUTING TABLES 116
7.6. TROUBLESHOOTING ROUTING TABLE 117
7.7. DEBUGGING IP PACKET FORWARDING 117
8. RIP (R) 120 120
8.1. RIP V1 122
8.2. RIP V2 123
9. IGRP (I) 100 126
10. EIGRP (D 90) (EX 170) 129
10.1. HOW EIGRP WORKS 129
10.2. DUAL 135
10.3. AUTHENTICATION 138
10.4. SUMMARIZARTION 139
10.5. EIGRP AND THE WAN 140
10.6. NEW TO EIGRP WITH RELEASE 12.0 142
10.7. CONFIGURING EIGRP 143
11. OSPF (O) 110 145
11.1. OSPF BASICS 145
11.2. OSPF ROUTING 150
11.3. NETWORK TYPES 151
11.4. AREAS 154
11.5. OSPF AREA AUTHENTICATION 157
11.6. OSPF ROUTE SUMMARIZATION 157
11.6.1. Inter-Area Summarization 158
11.6.2. External Summarization 158
11.7. OSPF DESIGN TECHNIQUES 159
11.8. OSPF CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW 159
11.9. OSPF CONFIGURATION 160
11.10. OSPF COMMANDS 160
11.11. TROUBLESHOOTING OSPF 162
12. IS-IS (I) 115 166
12.1. IS-IS ROUTING 166
12.2. AUTHENTICATION 171
12.3. ISIS CONFIGURATION 172
12.4. TROUBLESHOOTING ISIS 172
13. ON-DEMMAND ROUTING (ODR) (160) 174
14. BGP (B) 20 / 200 176
14.1. BGP DECISION ALGORITHM 178
14.2. BGP ROUTING 183
14.2.1. Selecting a BGP Path 183
14.2.2. Other Routing Information 183
14.2.3. IBGP Routing 185
14.2.4. EBGP Routing 189
14.2.5. Advertising Routes 191
14.2.6. Route Cache Invalidation 192
14.2.7. Aggregate Address 192
14.3. CONTROLLING THE FLOW OF BGP UPDATES 195
14.4. LOAD BALANCING TRAFFIC 196
14.5. BGP FILTERING 197
14.6. INTERNET CONNECTIVITY OPTIONS 201
14.7. MULTIPROTOCOL BGP 204
14.8. BASIC BGP CONFIGURATION 204
14.9. BGP COMMANDS 205
14.10. BGP TROUBLESHOOTING 206
15. IPX 210
15.1. IPX EIGRP 211
15.2. IPX AND WANS 213
15.3. IPX AND DDR 214
15.4. NLSP 216
15.5. TUNNELING 218
15.6. IPX COMMANDS 220
15.7. IPX TROUBLESHOOTING 221
16. ROUTE FILTERING 223
16.1. ROUTE FILTERS 223
16.2. PREFIX-LISTS 224
16.3. DISTRIBUTE-LISTS 226
16.4. ROUTE-MAPS 227
17. ROUTE REDISTRIBUTION 232
17.1. GENERAL REDISTRIBUTION 232
17.2. REDISTRIBUTION PROBLEMS 233
17.3. STATIC REDISTRIBUTION 235
17.4. RIP REDISTRIBUTION 235
17.5. IGRP REDISTRIBUTION 236
17.6. EIGRP REDISTRIBUTION 236
17.7. OSPF REDISTRIBUTION 239
17.8. IS-IS REDISTRIBUTION 241
17.9. BGP REDISTRIBUTION 241
17.10. IPX REDISTRIBUTION 243
17.11. FLSM AND VLSM 244
17.12. MUTUAL REDISTRIBUTION 246
17.13. REDISTRIBUTION SUMMARIES 250
17.14. TROUBLESHOOTING REDISTRIBUTION 251
18. BRIDGING 253
18.1. STP 253
18.1.1. Bridged Parameters 253
18.2. TRANSPARENT BRIDGING 254
18.3. CONCURRENT ROUTING AND BRIDGING 256
18.4. INTEGRATED ROUTING AND BRIDGING (IRB) 256
18.5. SOURCE ROUTE BRIDGING 258
18.6. RSRB 260
18.7. SRT 261
18.8. SR/TLB 262
19. DLSW+ 265
19.1.1. Encapsulations 266
19.1.2. DLSW and Ethernet 268
19.1.3. Configuring DLSw+ 268
19.1.4. DLSw+ DDR Configurations 271
19.1.5. DLSW Load Balancing Configurations 272
19.1.6. DLSW (Commands) 275
19.2. BRIDGING TROUBLESHOOTING 276
20. ACCESS-LISTS 279
20.1. IP ACCESS-LISTS 279
20.1.1. ICMP Messages 281
20.1.2. ACL and Routing Protocols 282
20.1.3. Configuring IP Access-Lists 282
20.2. IPX ACCESS-LISTS 287
20.2.1. The Basics 287
20.2.2. IPX Network Filtering 288
20.2.3. SAP Filtering 289
20.2.4. Troubleshooting IPX 290
20.3. MAC ACCESS-LISTS 290
20.3.1. LSAPs (200) 291
20.3.2. SNA 292
20.3.3. NetBIOS 292
20.3.4. Bit-Swapping 293
20.3.5. DLSw+ 295
20.3.6. Bridging (MAC) Filters (700) 296
20.4. ACCESS-EXPRESSIONS 297
21. QUEUING 299
21.1. WFQ 299
21.1.1. CB-WFQ 300
21.1.2. Low-Latency Queueing (LLQ) 300
21.1.3. Distributed WFQ (DWFQ) 301
21.2. WEIGHTED RANDOM EARLY DETECTION 302
21.3. PRIORITY QUEUING 302
21.4. CUSTOM QUEUING 302
21.5. COMMITTED ACCESS RATE (CAR) 303
21.6. TROUBLESHOOTING QUEUEING 303
22. TRAFFIC SHAPING 305
22.1. POLICY ROUTING 305
22.2. RTP PRIORITY 307
22.3. GENERIC TRAFFIC-SHAPING (GTS) 307
22.4. FRAME-RELAY QUEUING 308
22.4.1. Frame-Relay DLCI-Prioritization 308
22.4.2. Frame-Relay Broadcast Queue 308
22.4.3. Frame-Relay Traffic-Shaping (FRTS) 308
22.5. IP PRECEDENCE 311
22.6. RSVP 312
22.7. RANDOM EARLY DETECTION (RED) 313
22.8. DATA COMPRESSION 313
22.9. MPLS AND TAG SWITCHING 313
23. MULTICASTING 314
23.1. INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL (IGMP) 314
23.2. CISCO GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL (CGMP) 315
23.2.1. Stopping Multicasts from Broadcasting on a Switch 316
23.3. DISTANCE VECTOR MULTICAST ROUTING PROTOCOL (DVMRP) 317
23.4. PROTOCOL INDEPENDENT MULTICAST (PIM) 320
23.4.1. Dense Mode 324
23.4.2. Sparse-Mode 324
23.5. MULTIPROTOCOL BGP (MBGP) 329
23.6. MULTICAST SOURCE DISCOVERY PROTOCOL (MSDP) 329
23.7. TROUBLESHOOTING COMMANDS 331
23.8. INTERNET MULTICAST ADDRESSES 332
23.9. QUICK CONFIGURATION GUIDES 332
24. SECURITY 334
24.1. TACACS 334
24.2. NETWORK ADDRESS TRANSLATION (NAT) 334
24.2.1. Basic NAT Configuration 335
24.2.2. Port Address Translation (Overload) 336
24.2.3. TCP Load Sharing 336
24.2.4. Dynamic NAT 337
24.2.5. Nat on a Stick 337
24.2.6. NAT Timers 338
24.3. AUTHENTICATION, AUTHORIZATION, AND ACCOUNTING 341
24.4. IPSEC 342
24.4.1. Configuring IPSec 345
24.4.2. Quick Notes 347
24.4.3. Basic IPSec over Tunnel (Works) 347
24.4.4. GRE Tunnel 349
24.4.5. IP and IPX over Frame-Relay 350
24.4.6. Troubleshooting IKE and IPSec 351
25. VOICE 353
25.1. VOIP 353
25.1.1. Basic Analog Telephone Connection over IP Example 353
25.1.2. General Configuration Information 354
25.1.3. Configuring VoIP 355
25.1.4. More Configuration Commands 355
25.1.5. Show commands 358
25.1.6. Debug commands 358
25.1.7. Troubleshooting and Verifying VoIP Connectivity 358
25.1.8. Voice Troubleshooting Methodology 358

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Asbjorn Hojmark
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 5:06 PM
To: 'Manny Gonzalez'
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: Topics to cover

> Is there a list posted on some website or maybe even in the
> archives of the list detailing all the subjects that one needs
> to cover? I am kind of running out of new subjects to tackle and
> wonder if there is something I am missing.

Browse through the configuration guides for IOS 12.1, and if you can
still say you're running out of topics, I'd say you're in good shape for
the test.

-A

--
Heroes: Vint Cerf & Bob Kahn, Leonard Kleinrock, Robert Metcalfe Links :
http://www.hojmark.org/networking/


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:56:19 GMT-3