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Cisco TCP/IP Routing Configuration (Contd.)

 

Building Scalable Cisco Networks (exam #640-503): Routing principles, Describing classful and classless routing protocols, and the use of fields in a routing table.

Extending IP addresses using VLSM's, configuring OSFP, comparing the benefits of OSFP vs. RIP, interconnecting multiple OSFP areas, the use of OSFP to support route summarization in multiple areas, configuring EIGRP, describing enhanced IGRP features and operation, configuring basic bordering gateway protocol, describing BGP communities and peer groups, describing and configuring policy control in BGP using prefix lists. Optimizing routing update operations, configuring route redistribution in a network that does and doesn't have redundant paths between dissimilar routing processes, verifying route redistribution, and configuring policy based routing and verifying proper operation.

Building Cisco Multilayer Switched Networks (exam #640-504): Enabling CGMP on the distribution layer devices, identifying the correct Cisco Systems product solution given a set of network switching requirements, describing how switches facilitate multicast traffic, identifying the components necessary to effect multiplayer switching, describing how MLS functions on a switch, describing spanning tree, configuring the switch devices to improve spanning tree convergence in the network, providing physical connectivity between two devices within a switch block, providing connectivity between two network devices, applying IOS command set to diagnose and troubleshoot switched network problems, describing the different trunking protocols, and describing LAN segmentation using switches.

Building Cisco Remote Access Networks (exam #640-505): Specifying the Cisco products that best meet the WAN connection requirements for connections, explaining the advantages and disadvantages of WAN connection types, assembling and cabling the WAN components, configuring asynchronous connections to a central site with modems, configuring PPP and controlling network access with PAP and CHAP, using ISDN and DDR technologies to enhance remote connectivity, optimizing the use of DDR interfaces, using X.25 for remote access, establishing a dedicated frame relay connection and control traffic flow, enabling a backup to the permanent connection, managing network performance with queuing and compression, scaling IP addresses with network address translation, and using AAA to scale access control in an expanding network.

Cisco Internetwork Troubleshooting (exam #640-506): Demonstrating knowledge of troubleshooting targets for connection less and connection-oriented protocols, describing the types of purposes and tools commonly used for network troubleshooting processes, using proven problem isolation techniques to list the symptoms of common TCP/IP, Novell, AppleTalk, Catalyst 5000, and VLAN problems, describing an efficient problem-solving method when troubleshooting

 

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