Book Image

CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 Certification Guide

By : Lazaro (Laz) Diaz
Book Image

CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 Certification Guide

By: Lazaro (Laz) Diaz

Overview of this book

Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) Routing and Switching is one of the most important qualifications for keeping your networking skills up to date. CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 Certification Guide covers topics included in the latest CCNA exam, along with review and practice questions. This guide introduces you to the structure of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and examines in detail the creation of IP networks and sub-networks and how to assign addresses in the network. You will then move on to understanding how to configure, verify, and troubleshoot layer 2 and layer 3 protocols. In addition to this, you will discover the functionality, configuration, and troubleshooting of DHCPv4. Combined with router and router simulation practice, this certification guide will help you cover everything you need to know in order to pass the CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 exam. By the end of this book, you will explore security best practices, as well as get familiar with the protocols that a network administrator can use to monitor the network.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
4
Subnetting in IPv4
21
Mock Test Questions
22
Assessments

Wide Area Networks

I hope you are ready for the magnitude of the amount of information that WANs are made up of. Cisco supports numerous types of WAN designs, which means the hardware, protocols and topologies that can get created, would fill up a whole library.

We are going to focus on some of the basics of WAN technologies and protocols that you will encounter in the CCNA certification but also in real-world scenarios. We will discuss the different types of connection options that a WAN can create. In LAN, you were pretty much in control and if you needed to add other links to connect to new offices, it was as easy as running wire through your infrastructure and making sure the cables were properly created and terminated. Connectivity would not be an issue and you would simply create the IP scheme. Wide Area Networks are not so simple. If you are a company that has branch offices...