Ulteriori informazioni
Informationen zum Autor Walter Goralski has worked in the telecommunications and networking industry all his professional life. He has worked with and programmed WANs, LANs, and inter-vendor communications systems. He has been a programmer, project manager, communications cabling specialist, consultant, course developer, technical trainer, and university professor at the graduate level. He joined Juniper Networks in 2000 after 8 years as a technical trainer and currently holds the title of Technical Lead in the Information and Learning Experience department. Goralski is the author of 15 books about networking technologies.Takes the popular Stevens approach and modernizes it, employing 2008 equipment, operating systems, and router vendors. This book presents an 'illustrated' explanation of how TCP/IP works with consistent examples from a real, working network configuration that includes servers, routers, and workstations.
Sommario
1 Protocols and Layers2 TCP/IP Protocols and Devices3 Network Technologies4 IPv4 and IPv6 Addressing5 Resolution Protocol6 IPv4 and IPv6 Headers7 ICMP8 Routing9 Forwarding IP Packets10 User Datagram Protocol (UDP)11 TCP12 Multiplexing and Sockets13 Routing and Peering14 IGPs: RIP, OSPF, and IS-IS15 BGP16 Multicast17 IP Switching and Convergence18 DHCP19 DNS: The Domain Name System20 FTP21 SMTP and Email22 HTTP23 Securing Sockets with SSL24 SNMP25 SSH (Remote Access)26 MPLS-based VPNs27 NAT28 Firewalls29 IPSec30 Voice over IP
Relazione
"This book provides a diverse and solid foundation that will be immensely beneficial to new network engineers, those looking for a refresher or developers." --Alan Young, Google, Network Surveillance Team"i haven't had time to read the manuscript completely. however, what i like about the book is it covers all the topics from basics to voip to mpls vpn to ssl and this is one of the key factor that separates this book. unlike other tcp/ip books which talk mostly about history this one talks about what is happening today. another great thing i like is the use of diagram and tools." --Amit KT, Network Engineer, Peak Web Consulting, SF, CA"It looks like a very good primer for someone who is about to get serious about working in the networking field. The book describes several things that we take for granted like standards organizations. But if you are new to the industry it is good to be educated about how we arrive at standards." --Landon Scott, Channel SE, Juniper Networks