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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 By Your Name CCNA 3 Chapter 1 Review: The OSI Reference Model and Routing
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Objectives Describe the overall function of the OSI reference model and the problems it solves Describe the characteristics of the: –OSI physical layer –OSI data link layer –OSI network layer –OSI transport layer Describe the function of routing in networks Understand the different classes of routing protocols
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Benefits of the OSI Model?
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 OSI Layers with Purpose
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Peer-to-Peer Communication
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Data Encapsulation
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Types of Ethernet Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 — LAN specifications, which operate at 10 Mbps over coaxial and twisted- pair cable. 100-Mbps Ethernet — A single LAN specification, also known as Fast Ethernet, which operates at 100 Mbps over twisted-pair cable. 1000 Mbps Ethernet — A single LAN specification, also known as Gigabit Ethernet, which operates at 1000 Mbps (1 Gbps) over fiber and twisted-pair cables. 10 Gigabit Ethernet is only supported over fiber optic media.
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Three Varieties of 10 Mbps Ethernet 10BASE-2 –Known as thin Ethernet or thinnet –Allows network segments up to 185 meters on coaxial cable 10BASE-5 –Known as thick Ethernet or thicknet –Allows network segments up to 500 meters on coaxial cable 10BASE-T –Carries Ethernet frames on inexpensive twisted- pair wiring
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Encapsulation
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 The Physical Layer
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 The Data Link Layer The Ethernet/802.3 Interface
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Comparing Models
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Address Classes
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Address Class Prefixes
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Subnetting Chart
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Layer 3 Addresses - Path and Host Information
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 ICMP Testing
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 How ARP Works
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Routing Table
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 IGP vs. EGP
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Path Determination
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Network and Host Addressing
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Path Selection and Packet Switching
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Network Layer Devices in Data Flow
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Routing Metrics
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Routed Versus Routing Protocol
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Path Switching The network layer (3) address does not change. The data link layer (2) MAC address changes for each segment.
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Static Versus Dynamic Routes The purpose of a static route Why dynamic routing is necessary Dynamic routing operations How distances on network paths are determined by various metrics Classes of routing protocols Time for convergence
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Static Versus Dynamic Routes
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Dynamic Routing Operations
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Routing Protocols A routing protocol defines the set of rules used by a router when it communicates with neighboring routers, including the following: –How to send updates –What knowledge these updates contain –When to send this knowledge –How to locate recipients of the updates
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Time to Convergence
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Distance Vector Routing Basics Routing updates explained The problem of routing loops The problem of counting to infinity Link-state routing basics How link-state protocols exchange routing information How topology changes propagate through the network of routers
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Distance Vector Routing Basics
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Distance Vector Discovery
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Distance Vector Topology Changes
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Routing Metric Components
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Link-State Routing Basics
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Counting to Infinity
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Split Horizon
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Route Poisoning
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Link-State Network Discovery
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Link-State Topology Changes
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Link-State Concerns
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Distance Vector Versus Link State
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Hybrid Protocols Cisco’s EIGRP
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 The Transport Layer Segmenting upper-layer applications Establishing a connection Data transfer Reliability with windowing Acknowledgment techniques
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 "Reliable" Transport
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Three-Way Handshake
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Data Transfer
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Windowing – Flow Control
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www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 Positive Acknowledgment
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