Advanced IP Network Design (CCIE Professional Development)
by Alvaro Retana - CCIE; Don Slice - CCIE; Russ White - CCIE
Cisco® LAN Switching (CCIE Professional Development)
by Kennedy Clark - CCIE #2175, CCSI; Kevin Hamilton - CCSI
Enhanced IP Services for Cisco Networks
by Donald C. Lee
Routing TCP/IP, Volume II (CCIE Professional Development)
by Jeff CCIE #1919 Doyle; Jennifer DeHavenCCIE #1402 Carroll
IP Quality of Service
by Srinivas Vegesna
CCIE Routing and Switching Exam Certification Guide, Fourth Edition
by Wendell Odom; Rus Healy; Denise Donohue
IPv6 Essentials, 2nd Edition
by Silvia Hagen
Troubleshooting IP Routing Protocols (CCIE® Professional Development)
by Faraz CCIE #4131 Shamim; Zaheer CCIE #4127 Aziz; Johnson CCIE #2637 Liu; Abe CCIE #2373 Martey
Internet Routing Architectures, Second Edition
by Sam Halabi; Danny McPherson
Cisco LAN Switching Configuration Handbook, Second Edition
by Steve McQuerry - CCIE No. 6108; David Jansen - CCIE No. 5952; David Hucaby - CCIE No. 4594
An essential guide to scaling and maintaining large networks.
Understand critical scalability issues and the parameters to plan for future network growth
Examine detailed migration plans with sample scenarios and working Cisco configuration examples
Learn the pros and cons of each major routing protocol and how to choose the right one for your environment
Understand the operations and scalability features of Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM)
Implement effective quality of service and network management techniques
Benefit from extensive large-scale network design and configuration case studies
Large-Scale IP Network Solutions provides practical advice for network engineers as IP networks grow and become more complex. With in-depth discussions of the major IP protocols--including RIP, Enhanced IGRP, OSPF, IS-IS, and BGP--this book evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of each protocol. In addition to specific large and medium network protocol deployment issues, this guide contains special sections on more general topics such as network management, core and distribution networks, multicasting, and quality of service features.
Router configuration examples, network case studies, and sample scenarios all help you put the book's information to use and become an effective Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert (CCIE). In addition, this title offers unique elements to help you prepare for the exam, including: case studies that highlight real-world design, implementation, management, and troubleshooting issues; configuiration examples from actual network input and output; scenarios that help you put solutions to use; and review questions and exercises.
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Based on 6 Ratings
Poorly Edited - 2001-01-25
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Editing seems to have been limited to running the text through a spell checker. Page 69 refers to "a Frame Rely network". Page 72 explains that an ISDN BRI provides "two barrier channels".
Frequently diagrams include acronyms for which no explanation is offered, as if the figure was shoveled in from somewhere else. There is no glossary of acronyms and many are missing from the index.
An entire chapter is spent on RIP1, with redundant statements about the lack of VLSM support and obsolete status.
My experience was that issues of technical sublety were as often muddied as they were explained.
There is good info in this book, too, but considering the Cisco name, I expected much better.
An outstanding book from one of the top network designers - 2000-09-05
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Khalid is one of the best network designers I have ever met. His book is excellent technically, and is both clear and concise. This is not a book for the faint hearted - a good knowledge of routing protocols and network design is a must. For those who are experienced network engineers, trying to "go to the next level", this is a MUST HAVE.
Yes, it's a good one. - 2000-11-22
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This book is about 560 pages long, and aproximately first 300 pages describe briefly Internet evolution and basics of IP protocols. It's a pretty interesting stuff, the content is good and style is o.k. too, but you can read it anywhere and I'd say there is nothing special there. The real value of this book in the last 260 pages. There are a few case studies, and it's something really unique. I was very surprised that I've never thought about some issues specific to very large networks. Hub and spoke network design for 800 routers is pretty much different from the 80 routers network. I think there are very few people in the world who are working on so high level and it's very interesting just to take a look at the problem examples they meet in their work.
Probably, this book won't help much in your everyday work, and probaly you'd expect more large network specific information. Of course, I wouldn't recommend you to read this book in the very beginning of your networking career. But if you 've got a strong networking backgroung and you're looking for more advanced design tutorials, this book, especially last 200 pages, would be very helpful.
Good, but supplement your reading with the relevant RFCs - 2000-12-08
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What? - 2002-05-04
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Never before has a Cisco book covered so many protocols so poorly in so little space. I actually felt more confused about IS-IS after reading this book than I did before I started. The coverage of other protocols is little better. The author's frequent grammatical slip-ups render many sentances open to contracdictory interpretations. On the whole, I would recommend the CCIE Routing TCP/IP Volumes I and II before this book. There are some good chapters here and there in the book, and some good information you won't find elsewhere, but the middle chunk of the text is a waste. So much of this book is a bad rehash of what the CCNP or CCIE candidate will have already studied elsewhere as to make the reading experience as a whole discouraging.
Top Level Categories:
Certification
Networking
Sub-Categories:
Certification > Cisco
Cisco > CCIE
Networking > Protocols
Networking > Routing
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