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CAR5501
Escuela de Informtica y Telecomunicaciones
Nicols Contador V.
Three functional areas are defined by the model: Enterprise Campus: This functional area contains the modules required to build a hierarchical, highly robust campus network. Access, distribution, and core principles are applied to these modules. Enterprise Edge: This functional area aggregates connectivity from the various elements at the edge of the enterprise network. It provides a description of connectivity to remote locations, the Internet, and remote users. Service Provider Edge: This area provides a description of connectivity to service providers such as Internet service providers (ISPs), WAN providers, and the public switched telephone network (PSTN).
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The diversity of the traffic mix poses stringent requirements on the network in terms of performance and security. The requirements significantly differ, depending on the traffic type. For example, voice and video require constant bandwidth and low delay and jitter, while transactional traffic requires high reliability and security with relatively low bandwidth. Video traffic is frequently carried as IP multicast traffic. Also, voice applications such as IP telephony require high reliability and availability, because the user expectations for a "dial tone" in the IP network are exactly the same as in traditional phone network. To meet the traffic requirements in the network, for example, voice and video traffic must be treated differently from other traffic, such as web-based traffic. QoS mechanisms are mandatory in converged networks.
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Networked infrastructure layer: This layer is where all of the IT resources are interconnected across a converged network foundation. The IT resources include servers, storage, and clients. The network infrastructure layer represents how these resources exist in different places in the network, including the campus, branch, data center, WAN and MAN, and teleworker. The objective for customers in this layer is to have "anywhere and anytime" connectivity. Interactive services layer This layer enables efficient allocation of resources to applications and business processes delivered through the networked infrastructure. This layer comprises these services: Voice and collaboration services Mobility services Security and identity services Storage services Computer services Application networking services Network infrastructure virtualization
Application layer: This layer includes business applications and collaboration applications. The objective for customers in this layer is to meet business requirements and achieve efficiencies by leveraging the interactive services layer.
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The networked infrastructure layer represents the physical infrastructurethe combination of network, servers, clients, and storage hardware that is deployed throughout an enterprise network. The interactive services layer represents the networkbased functionality by making resources available to applications and business processes. Application delivery, real-time communication, management, mobility, security, transport, and virtualization are parts of the interactive services layer. The application layer represents the enterprise software that addresses the needs of organizational processes and data flow, often in a large, distributed environment.
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To review, the focus of this course is on selecting, planning, implementing, tuning, and troubleshooting IP advanced routing protocols. This is a technical course at the level of Cisco CCNP* All of the models and tools described previously are important in the initial part of the process of selecting and planning. The best practice is to use one IP routing protocol throughout the enterprise if possible. In many cases, this practice is not possible, which will be discussed in detail in another module. For example. Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) will be a factor in the Corporate Internet and E-Commerce modules if multihomed to ISPs is implemented. You will usually use static routes for remote access and VPN users. Therefore, you are likely to have to deal with multiple routing protocols.
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The Enterprise Composite Network Model can assist in determining where each routing protocol is implemented, where the boundaries are, and how traffic flows are managed. It is obvious that advanced IP routing protocols must be implemented in all core networks to support high availability requirements. Less advanced routing protocols (such as RIP) and static routes may exist at the access and distribution levels within modules.
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Based on a best practice, one IP routing protocol has been selected throughout the whole enterprise network in the figure above. Enterprise networks usually employ an Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) such as RIP, EIGRP. or OSPF for the exchange of routing information within their networks. EIGRP has been used in the example above, as it has very fast convergence and supports a large network size. The network in the figure above has Internet connectivity in which multihoming with multiple routers has been implemented. For such interautonomous system connectivity, an Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) is used. BGP is an example of an EGP protocol, is selected above. It supports very large networks and has excellent traffic policy options. Besides advanced IP routing protocols supporting high availability requirements, static routes exist at the access and distribution levels for remote and VPN access.
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