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Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com By Your Name CCNA 3 Chapter 1 Review: The OSI Reference Model and Routing
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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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Page 1: Www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 By Your Name CCNA 3 Chapter 1 Review: The OSI Reference Model and Routing.

Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com

By

Your Name

CCNA 3 Chapter 1

Review: The OSI Reference Model and Routing

Page 2: Www.ciscopress.com Copyright 2003 By Your Name CCNA 3 Chapter 1 Review: The OSI Reference Model and Routing.

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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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Benefits of the OSI Model?

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OSI Layers with Purpose

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Peer-to-Peer Communication

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Data Encapsulation

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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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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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Encapsulation

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The Physical Layer

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The Data Link Layer

The Ethernet/802.3 Interface

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Comparing Models

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Address Classes

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Address Class Prefixes

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Subnetting Chart

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Layer 3 Addresses - Path and Host Information

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ICMP Testing

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How ARP Works

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Routing Table

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IGP vs. EGP

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Path Determination

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Network and Host Addressing

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Path Selection and Packet Switching

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Network Layer Devices in Data Flow

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Routing Metrics

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Routed Versus Routing Protocol

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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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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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Static Versus Dynamic Routes

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Dynamic Routing Operations

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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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Time to Convergence

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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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Distance Vector Routing Basics

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Distance Vector Discovery

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Distance Vector Topology Changes

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Routing Metric Components

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Link-State Routing Basics

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Counting to Infinity

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Split Horizon

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Route Poisoning

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Link-State Network Discovery

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Link-State Topology Changes

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Link-State Concerns

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Distance Vector Versus Link State

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Hybrid Protocols

Cisco’s EIGRP

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The Transport Layer

• Segmenting upper-layer applications• Establishing a connection• Data transfer• Reliability with windowing• Acknowledgment techniques

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"Reliable" Transport

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Three-Way Handshake

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Data Transfer

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Windowing – Flow Control

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Positive Acknowledgment