Top-Down Network Design
A systems analysis apporach to enterprise network design
Samenvatting
The authoritative book on designing networks that align with business goals
The purpose of Top-Down Network Design, Third Edition, is to help you design networks that meet a customer's business and technical goals. Whether your customer is another department within your own company or an external client, this book provides you with tested processes and tools to help you understand traffic flow, protocol behavior, and internetworking technologies. After completing this book, you will be equipped to design enterprise networks that meet a customer's requirements for functionality, capacity, performance, availability, scalability, affordability, security, and manageability.
This book is for you if you are an internetworking professional responsible for designing and maintaining medium- to large-sized enterprise networks. If you are a network engineer, architect, or technician who has a working knowledge of network protocols and technologies, this book will provide you with practical advice on applying your knowledge to internetwork design.
This book also includes useful information for consultants, systems engineers, and sales engineers who design corporate networks for clients. In the fast-paced presales environment of many systems engineers, it often is difficult to slow down and insist on a top-down, structured systems analysis approach. Wherever possible, this book includes shortcuts and assumptions that can be made to speed up the network design process.
Finally, this book is useful for undergraduate and graduate students in computer science and information technology disciplines. Students who have taken one or two courses in networking theory will find Top-Down Network Design, Third Edition, an approachable introduction to the engineering and business issues related to developing real-world networks that solve typical business problems.
Changes for the Third Edition
Networks have changed in many ways since the second edition was published. Many legacy technologies have disappeared and are no longer covered in the book. In addition, modern networks have become multifaceted, providing support for numerous bandwidth-hungry applications and a variety of devices, ranging from smart phones to tablet PCs to high-end servers. Modern users expect the network to be available all the time, from any device, and to let them securely collaborate with coworkers, friends, and family. Networks today support voice, video, high-definition TV, desktop sharing, virtual meetings, online training, virtual reality, and applications that we can't even imagine that brilliant college students are busily creating in their dorm rooms.
As applications rapidly change and put more demand on networks, the need to teach a systematic approach to network design is even more important than ever. With that need in mind, the third edition has been retooled to make it an ideal textbook for college students. The third edition features review questions and design scenarios at the end of each chapter to help students learn top-down network design.
- Learn a network design process that results in networks that perform well, provide security, and scale to meet growing demands for bandwidth
- Develop network designs that provide the high bandwidth and low delay required for real-time applications such as multimedia, distance learning, videoconferencing, teleprescene, virtual communities, and IP telephony
- Explore solutions for meeting QoS requirements, including IETF controlled-load and guaranteed services, IP multicast, and advanced switching, queuing, and routing algorithms
- Identify the advantages and disadvantages of various switching and routing protocols, including Rapid Spanning Tree, Protocol (RSTP), IEEE 802.1Q, EIGRP, OSPF, and BGP4
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
Part 1: Identifying Your Customer's Needs and Goals
1. Analyzing Business Goals and Constraints
2. Analyzing Technical Goals and Tradeoffs
3. Characterizing the Existing Internetwork
4. Characterizing Network Traffic
Part 2: Logical Network Design
5. Designing a Network Topology
6. Designing Models for Addressing and Numbering
7. Selecting Switching and Routing Protocols
8. Developing Network Security Strategies
9. Developing Network Management Strategies
Part 3: Physical Network Design
10. Selecting Technologies and Devices for Campus Networks 2
11. Selecting Technologies and Devices for Enterprise Networks
Part 4: Testing, Optimizing, and Documenting Your Network Design
12. Testing Your Network Design
13. Optimizing Your Network Design
14. Documenting Your Network Design
Glossary
Index
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