Book Image

Cisco Certified CyberOps Associate 200-201 Certification Guide

By : Glen D. Singh
Book Image

Cisco Certified CyberOps Associate 200-201 Certification Guide

By: Glen D. Singh

Overview of this book

Achieving the Cisco Certified CyberOps Associate 200-201 certification helps you to kickstart your career in cybersecurity operations. This book offers up-to-date coverage of 200-201 exam resources to fully equip you to pass on your first attempt. The book covers the essentials of network security concepts and shows you how to perform security threat monitoring. You'll begin by gaining an in-depth understanding of cryptography and exploring the methodology for performing both host and network-based intrusion analysis. Next, you'll learn about the importance of implementing security management and incident response strategies in an enterprise organization. As you advance, you'll see why implementing defenses is necessary by taking an in-depth approach, and then perform security monitoring and packet analysis on a network. You'll also discover the need for computer forensics and get to grips with the components used to identify network intrusions. Finally, the book will not only help you to learn the theory but also enable you to gain much-needed practical experience for the cybersecurity industry. By the end of this Cisco cybersecurity book, you'll have covered everything you need to pass the Cisco Certified CyberOps Associate 200-201 certification exam, and have a handy, on-the-job desktop reference guide.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
1
Section 1: Network and Security Concepts
5
Section 2: Principles of Security Monitoring
9
Section 3: Host and Network-Based Analysis
14
Section 4: Security Policies and Procedures
21
Chapter 17: Mock Exam 1
22
Chapter 18: Mock Exam 2

Delving into configuration and mobile device management

One of the major issues within the field of IT is properly tracking and managing the changes of configurations on systems. Whether the system is a device or even an application, system administrators will sometimes make a change on the system without creating a backup of the last known good configuration or even updating any documentation with a description of the changes. Additionally, you will often discover that systems within an enterprise network do not all have the same configurations due to modifications being made on systems without any tracking. This is referred to as configuration drift.

To solve this problem of configuration drift, organizations can implement proper configuration management techniques by using a standard such as the NIST SP 800-128, which focuses on the configuration management of information systems. Organizations can develop a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) that outlines how configurations...