Book Image

CCNA Security 210-260 Certification Guide

By : Glen D. Singh, Michael Vinod, Vijay Anandh
Book Image

CCNA Security 210-260 Certification Guide

By: Glen D. Singh, Michael Vinod, Vijay Anandh

Overview of this book

With CCNA Security certification, a network professional can demonstrate the skills required to develop security infrastructure, recognize threats and vulnerabilities to networks, and mitigate security threats. The CCNA Security 210-260 Certification Guide will help you grasp the fundamentals of network security and prepare you for the Cisco CCNA Security Certification exam. You’ll begin by getting a grip on the fundamentals of network security and exploring the different tools available. Then, you’ll see how to securely manage your network devices by implementing the AAA framework and configuring different management plane protocols. Next, you’ll learn about security on the data link layer by implementing various security toolkits. You’ll be introduced to various firewall technologies and will understand how to configure a zone-based firewall on a Cisco IOS device. You’ll configure a site-to-site VPN on a Cisco device and get familiar with different types of VPNs and configurations. Finally, you’ll delve into the concepts of IPS and endpoint security to secure your organization’s network infrastructure. By the end of this book, you’ll be ready to take the CCNA Security Exam (210-260).
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Firewalls in a layered defense strategy

In a layered defense strategy, firewalls provide perimeter security for the entire network and for internal network segments in the core. They can be used on separate VLAN segments. They can be used to separate the internal networks, separating one segment from the rest of the segments:

Several firewalls are used with several layers incorporated in them. Let's understand this process.

When the traffic flows in from an untrusted network, it encounters packet filter on the external router. In the next phase, the traffic steps into either a screened host firewall or a bastion host system. Then this system checks whether there are any suspicious packets, if yes, then it would get discarded. If the packet is not rejected then it would go to the interior screening router. After crossing all these checks, the packet travels to the final destination...