Chapter 7

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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public 1 Version 4.0 Prototyping the Campus Network Designing and Supporting Computer Networks – Chapter 7

Transcript of Chapter 7

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© 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Public 1Version 4.0

Prototyping the Campus Network

Designing and Supporting Computer Networks – Chapter 7

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Objectives Describe the purpose for and procedures to build a

prototype of the network design

Create test plans to perform simulated or prototype test of important design elements

Perform proof-of-concept tests on LAN design elements

Identify risks and weaknesses in the design based on the proof-of-concept test conclusions

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Prototype network: a separate network built to replicate only the portion of a network necessary to test particular functions or capabilities

Pilot network: using a portion of an existing network to test a new functionality or capability

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Create a test plan before beginning the testing process

Create a test plan document containing descriptions of the design and topology, test procedures, and anticipated results

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Methods to verify that a design meets the identified business criteria:

Prototyping

Basic connectivity tests

Functionality testing

Checklists

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Tools and methods used to validate that the design is working as anticipated:

Cisco IOS commands

IP utilities and tools

Protocol analyzers

Network simulation tools

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Test the redundancy and resiliency of a specific network design:

Overcoming device and link failures

Redundant links

Load balancing

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Describe the Purpose for and Procedures to Build a Prototype of the Network Design

Identify what represents a risk or weakness in the design

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Identify goals and requirements met by LAN design:

Testing the new design

Determining what needs to be tested

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Create the test plan:

List test outcomes that support business goals

Provide a checklist of success criteria

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Develop methodologies for comparing devices and topologies

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Develop methodologies for validating the choice of routing protocol

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Apply and test an appropriate addressing scheme

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Prototype the Hierarchical Network, Routing Protocol, and IP Addressing Model

Compare and analyze risks or weaknesses associated with choosing LAN devices, topologies, and addressing:

Lack of redundancy

Single ISP for Internet connectivity

Limited bandwidth areas

Limited fiber connectivity

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Identify the business goals and technical requirements supporting server relocation to a data center including a server farm.

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Create a success criteria checklist to support business goals and technical requirements for the server farm

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Develop methodologies for comparing devices and topologies:

Creating a baseline

LAN simulation with specific protocols (PVRST+)

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Prototype the server farm, validating security and availability:

Availability requirements

Multilayer security

Firewalls

ACL design

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Build and analyze the prototype of the LAN to ensure business goals and technical requirements have been met

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Prototype the Server Farm, Including Security and High Availability

Compare and analyze the risks or weaknesses associated with choosing server farm devices, topologies, and addressing

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Summary The decision to create a prototype or pilot network

depends on the type of testing required and the potential disruption to the existing network.

Before beginning any testing, a test plan should be developed.

Prototypes and simulations can be used to identify risks and areas of weakness in the network design.

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