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subject: What Is In the Sybex CCNA Study Guide [print this page]


What Is In the Sybex CCNA Study Guide
What Is In the Sybex CCNA Study Guide

The Sybex CCNA study guide is useful learning tool because of its simple writing style. For beginner, it is recommended to start with this study guide. However, you should not rely on it because it does not have detailed information that you need to pass the CCNA certification exam. This CCNA study guide includes fourteen chapters. In the next paragraphs, you'll see the content of each chapter in the Sybex CCNA study guide.

The first chapter named "Internetworking" talk about internetworking basics, internetworking models, the OSI reference model, Ethernet networking, Ethernet cabling, data encapsulation, and the Cisco three-layer hierarchical model.

The second chapter titled "Introduction to TCP/IP" contains useful information about TCP/IP, the DoD model, IP addressing, and broadcast addresses.

The third chapter "Subnetting, Variable Length Subnet Masks (VLSMs), and Troubleshooting TCP/IP" includes information about subnetting basics, variable length subnet masks (VLSMs), summarization, and troubleshooting IP addressing.

You'll find in the fourth chapter "Cisco's Internetworking Operating System (IOS) and Security Device Manager (SDM)" information about the IOS user interface, the command-Line interface (CLI), router and switch administrative configurations, router interfaces, viewing, Saving, and erasing configurations, and Cisco's Security Device Manager (SDM).

In the fifth chapter titled "Managing a Cisco Internetwork", the author talks about the internal components of a Cisco router, the router boot sequence, managing configuration register, backing up and restoring the Cisco IOS, backing up and restoring the Cisco configuration, using Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP), using Telnet, resolving hostnames, and checking network connectivity and troubleshooting.

The sixth chapter is "IP Routing" and has information about routing basics, the IP routing process, configuring IP routing in our network, dynamic routing, distance-vector routing protocols, Routing Information Protocol (RIP), Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP), and verifying your configurations.

In the seventh chapter "Enhanced IGRP (EIGRP) and Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)", you will read about

EIGRP features and operation, using EIGRP to support large networks, configuring EIGRP, load balancing with EIGRP, verifying EIGRP, Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) basics, configuring OSPF, verifying OSPF configuration, OSPF DR and BDR elections, OSPF and loopback interfaces, troubleshooting OSPF, and configuring EIGRP and OSPF summary routes.

"Layer 2 Switching and Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)" is the eighth chapter, which talk about switching services, Spanning Tree Protocol (STP), configuring catalyst switches, and Cisco Network Assistant.

The ninth chapter titled "Virtual LANs (VLANs)" talks about VLAN basics, VLAN memberships, identifying VLANs, VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP), routing between VLANs, configuring VLANs, configuring VTP, configuring Voice VLANs, and using the CNA to configure VLANs and inter-VLAN routing.

Security is the subject of the tenth chapter, which includes information about network perimeter, firewall, internal routers, recognizing security threats, mitigating security threats, introduction to Access Lists, standard Access Lists, extended Access Lists, advanced Access Lists, monitoring Access Lists, and configuring Access Lists using SDM.

The CCNA study guide has also a chapter about Network Address Translation (NAT), and includes information about when do we use NAT, types of Network Address Translation, NAT names, how NAT works, testing and troubleshooting NAT, configuring NAT, and configuring NAT using SDM.

The chapter ? Cisco's Wireless Technologies ? talk about the wireless technology, Cisco's unified wireless solution, and configuring a wireless internetwork.

In the Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) chapter you'll read information about why do we need IPv6, the benefits and uses of IPv6, IPv6 addressing and expressions, how IPv6 works, IPv6 routing protocols, migrating to IPv6, and configuring IPv6 on an internetwork.

The last chapter is Wide Area Networks, which provides information about wide area networks, cable and DSL, cabling the serial wide area network, High-Level Data-Link Control (HDLC) Protocol, Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), Frame Relay, using SDM for WAN Connections, and Virtual Private Networks.




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