From: Joseph Brunner (joe@affirmedsystems.com)
Date: Wed Oct 31 2007 - 14:58:55 ART
following:
1.peering
Running BGP to exchange routes and then data
2.private peering
Avoiding public IX's and NAP's (such as MaeEast & MaeWest). Used by big
carriers with a traffic sharing and or transit agreement (i.e. aoldn and
level3)
3.peering policy
Sometimes you'll hear terms like cold potato and hot potato routing. Usually
defines how the traffic is handed off to peers. Many times smaller transit
providers will hand-off very aggressively as their backbone is leased and
they can't afford to add OC-192 Links at will using existing dark fiber.
Larger providers will often have a "cold potato" policy. The peering policy
will decide how providers use each others network to reach customers of
those networks or third partiers. If just want to peer with Level3 to get to
Yahoo, etc. that may be part of the peering policy.
4.local peering
??? never heard this term...
5.WLAN static WEP
Non-tkip protected keys, IMHO. Usually the least secure. Able to crack in
about 10 minutes even with 128-bit keys thru the use of generated iv's.
6.WLAN LAN extension via EAP
Using 802.1x over wlan
7.WLAN LAN extension via IPSec
Could this be aes-cbc with wpa we keep hearing about?
Job interview got you blue?
Don't worry, many sales people could rattle these terms like a 30 round clip
in a full-auto mac-10 but couldn't do any of them from CLI.
-Joe
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Fri Nov 16 2007 - 13:11:19 ART