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Planning and Troubleshooting Routing and Switching Overview Selecting Intermediate Devices Planning an Internet Connectivity Strategy Planning Routing Communications Troubleshooting TCP/IP Routing Lesson: Selecting Intermediate Devices Types of Devices When to Use Routing Types of Networking Domains What Are the Features of Switches? Virtual LANs Full-Duplex Transmission in Switched Environments Guidelines for Selecting an Appropriate Intermediate Device Types of Devices Device OSI layer Hub Physical (layer 1) Switch Data-link (layer 2) Router Network (layer 3) Layer 3 switch Network (layers 2 and 3) Definition Extends the network by retransmitting the signal Does not process the data Is invisible to the nodes Forwards frames according to the destination address Uses temporary or virtual connections to connect source and destination ports Used to link WANs and dissimilar LANs Operates at the packet level Sends packets based on packet addressing Is a limited-purpose hardware-based IP router with bridging capabilities Also performs layer 2 switching When to Use Routing Use routing to: Isolate networks from each other Provide a start for a secure network implementation Traditional uses of routers Connecting WANs Segmenting LANs Types of Networking Domains Broadcast Domain Segment A Segment B Switch Hub Collision Domain A Hub Collision Domain B What Are the Features of Switches? Switch feature Layer 3 Cost Hardware routing Benefits Routes packets at layer 3 Forwards frames at layer 2 Substantially cheaper than similar performance routers Fast performance (near wire speed) Minimal latency Virtual LANs Layer 3 Switch VLAN 1 VLAN 2 Hub A B Hub C D Hub E VLAN ABE – Broadcast Domain F G VLAN CDFG – Broadcast Domain Full-Duplex Transmission in Switched Environments Switched Environment Switch Frame A Frame B Frame C Full-duplex communication Frame D Guidelines for Selecting an Appropriate Intermediate Device Cost Ease of implementation Administration and troubleshooting sophistication Protocol support Layer 1 support Speed Functionality Programmability Planning an Internet Connectivity Strategy Requirements for an Internet Connectivity Solution NAT as a Solution for Internet Connectivity ISA (Proxy) as a Solution for Internet Connectivity Guidelines for Planning an Internet Connectivity Strategy Requirements for an Internet Connectivity Solution Internet connectivity requirements Scalability and fault tolerance Filtering User access Authentication Bandwidth control Time-of-day access Extensibility and flexibility Application connectivity NAT as a Solution for Internet Connectivity Why NAT is a good solution Same security requirements for all users Non-routed private network Required private addressing 131.107.0.9 10.10.10.6 131.107.0.9 10.10.10.10 10.10.10.7 NAT Table 10.10.10.0 maps to 131.107.0.9 ISA (Proxy) as a Solution for Internet Connectivity Why ISA (Proxy) is a good solution Secure Internet and private network access Routed or non-routed network Cache web contents 131.107.0.9 131.107.0.9 Intranet 10.10.10.10 10.10.10.9 10.10.10.8 10.10.10.8 ISA (Proxy) Server 10.10.10.7 10.10.10.0 maps to 131.107.0.9 Guidelines for Planning an Internet Connectivity Strategy Define the existing network structure Define security requirements Identify connectivity requirements Select an appropriate solution Planning Routing Communications Determining the Appropriate Connection Method Selecting a Routing Protocol Guidelines for Planning Router Connectivity Determining the Appropriate Connection Method Connection method When used Security is important Leased lines Tunneling Demand-dial routing On demand Demand-dial -persistent Speed and reliability are required No budget constraints Security is important No modem infrastructure Security is important Limited traffic Per-instance fee pricing structure Ample traffic Flat fee pricing structure Selecting a Routing Protocol Protocol Static routes RIP (dynamic) OSPF (dynamic) Criteria Routing information rarely changes Small internetworks Scalability not an issue Manual updates required Routing information constantly changes Automatic routing table updates required Existing routers use RIP Design includes demand-dial interface Maximum number of routers an IP packet will cross is 16 Routing information constantly changes Existing routers use OSPF Design includes redundant paths between two subnets Design has more than 50 subnets Using IP Packet Filters Corporate Headquarters Branch Office Interface B outbound filter All other protocols SNMP Interface A inbound filter ICMP All other protocols Branch Office Interface C outbound filter All protocols Guidelines for Planning Router Connectivity Identify the router connection method Determine which connectivity options to use Determine which routing protocol to use Identify filter settings Troubleshooting TCP/IP Routing How to Isolate a Routing Problem When to Use Each of the Troubleshooting Tools Troubleshooting TCP/IP Routing How to Isolate a Routing Problem Outside-In Strategy Can you ping the remote host? Yes No Inside-Out Strategy Can you No Determine tracert to where trace remote host? fails Is the IP configuration correct? Is the routing table accurate? Yes Check system configuration Correct the configuration Yes Yes If problem still exists, check route configuration No Can you access the failed system? No No Correct/delete the incorrect route entries Yes Can you ping the gateway? No Contact network support engineer Yes Fix configuration problem Contact the administrator of the failed system Can you ping interior gateways? No Use tracert to identify communication breakdown Divide-by-Half : Isolate by ½ the connection issue, then isolate by ½ again When to Use Each of the Troubleshooting Tools Troubleshooting area Utility to use Hostname Local computer configuration Ipconfig NetStat Nbtstat ARP Network connections NetDiag Tracert Tracing paths Ping Pathping DNS NSlookup