Book Image

CCNA Cyber Ops SECOPS – Certification Guide 210-255

By : Andrew Chu
5 (1)
Book Image

CCNA Cyber Ops SECOPS – Certification Guide 210-255

5 (1)
By: Andrew Chu

Overview of this book

Cybersecurity roles have grown exponentially in the IT industry and an increasing number of organizations have set up security operations centers (SOCs) to monitor and respond to security threats. The 210-255 SECOPS exam is the second of two exams required for the Cisco CCNA Cyber Ops certification. By providing you with fundamental knowledge of SOC events, this certification validates your skills in managing cybersecurity processes such as analyzing threats and malicious activities, conducting security investigations, and using incident playbooks. You'll start by understanding threat analysis and computer forensics, which will help you build the foundation for learning intrusion analysis and incident response principles. The book will then guide you through vocabulary and techniques for analyzing data from the network and previous events. In later chapters, you'll discover how to identify, analyze, correlate, and respond to incidents, including how to communicate technical and inaccessible (non-technical) examples. You'll be able to build on your knowledge as you learn through examples and practice questions, and finally test your knowledge with two mock exams that allow you to put what you’ve learned to the test. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills to confidently pass the SECOPS 210-255 exam and achieve CCNA Cyber Ops certification.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Endpoint Threat Analysis and Forensics
5
Section 2: Intrusion Analysis
9
Section 3: Incident Response
13
Section 4: Data and Event Analysis
16
Section 5: Incident Handling
19
Section 6: Mock Exams
20
Mock Exam 1
21
Mock Exam 2

Summary

Using a layered model of networking (either OSI or TCP/IP) allows protocols to be mixed and matched. In a typical network transfer, the application data is encapsulated in a transport layer frame (either TCP or UDP) that facilitates multiple simultaneous network connections. This segment/datagram is further encapsulated in a network layer frame (normally IP) that coordinates routing, and is then wrapped in an Ethernet frame for transmission over the physical medium between two devices.

At each level, headers are added that track the two ends of the session (source and destination). The way that the source and destination are identified varies depending on the layer, in order to ultimately identify a single application on a single host to a single application/resource somewhere else in the network. When addresses are modified (on the device or in the header), this can...