From: Marvin Greenlee (marvingreenlee@yahoo.com)
Date: Wed Jan 31 2007 - 01:46:09 ART
Those topics are all clearly listed on the blueprint,
and shouldn't be a surprise.
The original question for this thread was asking how
in depth the routing protocols knowledge needs to be.
For the Security lab, general knowledge of the
protocols is enough, the deep understanding needs to
be in the areas of the security devices, and security
features on the routers / switches.
Focus on the blueprint and make sure you are very
comfortable with all the topics listed. That has
always been the recommended study plan.
Marvin Greenlee, CCIE #12237 (R&S/Security/Service
Provider)
IPexpert Senior Technical Instructor
marvin@ipexpert.com
http://www.ipexpert.com
--- Ibrahim Inzuddin <izu@bit.com.my> wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I took the CCIE Security Lab exam on Monday.
> Basically, if you want to pass,
> you need to know many new things such as ASA
> security context, ASA failover,
> 802.1x, router/switch security, etc. If you have
> attended Cisco PDI or PDIO
> bootcamp for Cisco Partner, that might helps a lot.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com
> [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Marvin Greenlee
> Sent: 30 January 2007 06:13 AM
> To: Greivin Viquez; ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Cc: security@groupstudy.com
> Subject: Re: Simple question about the new Cisco
> CCIE LAB blueprint
>
> Assuming that you are talking about the security
> lab,
> you should, at a minimum, have knowledge of the
> following:
>
>
> How to configure routing protocols on the security
> devices (VPNc, ASA, PIX)
> How Lan-to-lan GRE tunnels and DMVPN use routing to
> pass information for remote subnets, and how to
> configure, including how to avoid recursive routing
> issues
> How to configure a security device to pass routing
> protocols (IDS, ASA/PIX)
> How things like RRI affect routing and reachability
> How to configure BGP for RTBH, (which is explicitly
> listed on the blueprint)
>
> How to verify existing routing configuration,
> including redistribution
>
> The primary focus of the security lab is to test
> knowledge of the security topics. Routing is there
> for underlying connnectivity, but should not cause
> any
> problems if you are comfortable with all the above
> items. Look at the available vendor workbooks for
> security, and you will get a pretty good idea of the
> types of things that you will need to configure when
> it comes to routing protocols.
>
>
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