LAN Switching first-step
by Matthew J. Castelli
A Practical Guide to Red Hat® Linux®, Third Edition: Fedora™ Core and Red Hat Enterprise Linux
by Mark G. Sobell
Routing first-step
by Bill Parkhurst
CCIE Routing and Switching Exam Certification Guide, Fourth Edition
by Wendell Odom; Rus Healy; Denise Donohue
IPv6 Essentials, 2nd Edition
by Silvia Hagen
CCIE Professional Development Routing TCP/IP, Volume I, Second Edition
by Jeff Doyle - CCIE No. 1919; Jennifer Carroll - CCIE No. 1402
Internet Routing Architectures, Second Edition
by Sam Halabi; Danny McPherson
A comprehensive ntroduction to routing concepts and protocols in IP networks.
Comprehensive review of the operational mechanics of today's leading routing protocols, including IGRP, EIGRP, OSPF, RIP, and RIP-2
Detailed explanation of IP addressing, including classful and classless addresses, subnetting, supernetting, Classless Interdomain Routing (CIDR), and Variable Length Subnet Masks (VLSM)
Side-by-side comparisons of various LAN segmentation technologies, including bridges, switches, and routers
Exploration of how routers are used to build wide area networks
Examination of the future of routing, including IPv6, next generation routing protocols, host-based routing, and IP Switching
IP Routing Fundamentals is the definitive introduction to routing in IP networks. This comprehensive guide explores the mechanics of routers, routing protocols, network interfaces, and operating systems.
This reference provides essential background information for network professionals who are deploying and maintaining LANs and WANs, as well as IT managers who are seeking information on how evolving internetworking technology will affect future networks. Part I discusses the many roles routers play in networks, Part II talks about the inner working of routers, Part III works with the operational issues of routing protocols, and Part IV addresses implementation issues that provide practical insight, in addition to a discussion of the future of routing.
Average Amazon.com® Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Based on 9 Ratings
This book is great ! - 2000-01-02
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
This is a great book. Mr. Sportack provides his readers with a fluent overview of network engineering as it relates to WAN technology. He breaks his book down into four well organized and well developed sections.
The first section discusses the essance of LAN funtionality. He talks about the OSI model, data, IP addressing, scalibility, growth constraints and resolutions for those constraints.
Then he dedicates several chapters to WANs. He talks about how they communicate and he gives a fantastic overview of WAN protocols that use Circuit, Packet, and Cell switching technologies as well as an indepth sectin on media.
The third section covers the routing protocols. Why? So you can design your routed network and choose the best protocols based on your network needs and the protocols performance benifits and constraints.
The fourth section covers engineering a Network. He discusses topoligies, protocols, and blended systems.
The graphics and style of this book are indicitave of a great communicator. Before I read this book I could confuse anybody I talked to about networking, now I can communicate these complex issues on a more down to earth level. Mr. Sportack should be highly commended for this book.
Best Internetworking introduction available - 1999-09-25
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
This book is the definitive introduction to routing in networks using IP. It explains the various transmission technologies, routing protocols, and routed protocols (IPv4, IPv6). After reading this book you feel the need for buying more Cisco books and you'll not have problems with doing so because you already know the basics of IP routing.
fairly good introduction - 2000-05-04
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
I don't understand why this book deserves so many 5 stars (which was the reason I picked up the book). While it provides sufficient introductary material on the subject, the book should really be half thick at most -- the layout wastes lots of paper, and also there is simply too much repeating and redundency, in some cases repeating the same diagrams, paragraphs and sentences. Added to that is the existence of errors, some of them in the examples.
Good information, but not clearly written - 2002-06-25
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
The book is technically well written. BUT...it's about as dry as burnt toast. And the author insists on using non-standard phrases like "contention domain" to describe "collision domains". How about writing a book in plain English? This book has useful information, but the author seems to put too much energy into writing in a style that says "Hey, look at me! I'm so smart that I can make even simple concepts sound confusing!". Keep it on your shelf as a reference. You might need to take it out and blow the dust off of it every few months.
Good sleeping material - 2000-11-21
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Sheesh, half a chapter and it is lights out! Just kidding. The book is very good, but like one other reviewer said, it could be half as thick and still have the same info in it. Alot of reviewing and repeating of stuff already talked about (I guess redundancy is not all that bad). But it is not light reading- very dry writing that is at times tedious to read. But the subject is well covered and gives a good background into the principles of routing and IP.
Top Level Categories:
Networking
Sub-Categories:
Networking > Protocols
Networking > Routing
Networking > TCP/IP
Some information on this page was provided using data from Amazon.com®. View at Amazon >