| Overview
While several publishers (including O'Reilly) supply excellent
documentation of router features, the trick is knowing when, why,
and how to use these features There are often many different ways
to solve any given networking problem using Cisco devices, and some
solutions are clearly more effective than others. The pressing
question for a network engineer is which of the many potential
solutions is the most appropriate for a particular situation. Once
you have decided to use a particular feature, how should you
implement it? Unfortunately, the documentation describing a
particular command or feature frequently does very little to answer
either of these questions. Everybody who has worked with Cisco
routers for any length of time has had to ask their friends and
co-workers for example router configuration files that show how to
solve a common problem. A good working configuration example can
often save huge amounts of time and frustration when implementing a
feature that you've never used before. The Cisco Cookbook
gathers hundreds of example router configurations all in one place.
As the name suggests, Cisco Cookbook is organized as a
series of recipes. Each recipe begins with a problem statement that
describes a common situation that you might face. After each
problem statement is a brief solution that shows a sample router
configuration or script that you can use to resolve this particular
problem. A discussion section then describes the solution, how it
works, and when you should or should not use it. The chapters are
organized by the feature or protocol discussed. If you are looking
for information on a particular feature such as NAT, NTP or SNMP,
you can turn to that chapter and find a variety of related recipes.
Most chapters list basic problems first, and any unusual or
complicated situations last. The Cisco Cookbook will quickly
become your "go to" resource for researching and solving complex
router configuration issues, saving you time and making your
network more efficient. It covers:
Router Configuration and File Management Router Management User Access and Privilege Levels TACACS+ IP Routing RIP EIGRP OSPF BGP Frame Relay Queueing and Congestion Tunnels and VPNs Dial Backup NTP and Time DLSw Router Interfaces and Media Simple Network Management Protocol Logging Access Lists DHCP NAT Hot Standby Router Protocol IP Multicast
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionWhile several publishers (including O'Reilly) supply excellent documentation of router features, the trick is knowing when, why, and how to use these features There are often many different ways to solve any given networking problem using Cisco devices, and some solutions are clearly more effective than others. The pressing question for a network engineer is which of the many potential solutions is the most appropriate for a particular situation. Once you have decided to use a particular feature, how should you implement it? Unfortunately, the documentation describing a particular command or feature frequently does very little to answer either of these questions. Everybody who has worked with Cisco routers for any length of time has had to ask their friends and co-workers for example router configuration files that show how to solve a common problem. A good working configuration example can often save huge amounts of time and frustration when implementing a feature that you've never used before. The Cisco Cookbook gathers hundreds of example router configurations all in one place. As the name suggests, Cisco Cookbook is organized as a series of recipes. Each recipe begins with a problem statement that describes a common situation that you might face. After each problem statement is a brief solution that shows a sample router configuration or script that you can use to resolve this particular problem. A discussion section then describes the solution, how it works, and when you should or should not use it. The chapters are organized by the feature or protocol discussed. If you are looking for information on a particular feature such as NAT, NTP or SNMP, you can turn to that chapter and find a variety of related recipes. Most chapters list basic problems first, and any unusual or complicated situations last. The Cisco Cookbook will quickly become your "go to" resource for researching and solving complex router configuration issues, saving you time and making your network more efficient. It covers: - Router Configuration and File Management
- Router Management
- User Access and Privilege Levels
- TACACS+
- IP Routing
- RIP
- EIGRP
- OSPF
- BGP
- Frame Relay
- Queueing and Congestion
- Tunnels and VPNs
- Dial Backup
- NTP and Time
- DLSw
- Router Interfaces and Media
- Simple Network Management Protocol
- Logging
- Access Lists
- DHCP
- NAT
- Hot Standby Router Protocol
- IP Multicast
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Reader Reviews From Amazon (Ranked by 'Helpfulness') Average Customer Rating: based on 14 reviews. Amazon, Please add more stars for this book., 2007-08-13 Reviewer rating: I don't write many reviews, but I had to say something for this title. Within 48 hours of receiving this book (along with "Hardening Cisco Routers" also from O'Reilly) I had put some of these recipes into production.
I even find that I can read each chapter like a study or reference guide due to its excellent structure. The first few recipes of each chapter are very basic and explain the concept of what you are trying to achieve. However the author clearly states that the basic solution is either full of pitfalls or security holes. The following recipes cover each pitfall or hole until the last recipe, usually titled 'Putting it All Together', is a full fledged, practical solution with no theory.
The theory and study guides should take some cues from this book, and begin really teaching real-world networking.
ONE WARNING - This book covers working with routers primarily. "Cisco Router Cookbook" would be a more apt title. However I have applied some of the VPN router concepts to Pix firewall configurations.
Mr. Dooley, where is the Cisco Switching Cookbook!!?? | Covers the essentials better than anything else I've seen, 2007-03-05 Reviewer rating: As a telecommunications engineer I've read a lot of Cisco books and this is by far one of my favorites. The format: (problem - solution - discussion) really helps tie in the theory with the reality. It is well indexed and I found the discussion sections to be particularly well written and illuminating. I go back to this book time and time again and I am looking forward to purchasing the latest edition. Although not really intended as a study guide for certification I nevertheless found it helpful in clarifying concepts that other books could not. When you're ready to get your hands dirty in a Cisco router this is the book to take with you. | Great Book that is Ready for an Update, 2006-02-11 Reviewer rating: This is a great reference for anyone who supports Cisco routers, BUT... some of the sections are out of date, for example, the section on QOS. Also, a section that needs to be added is MPLS. I would buy a new version just for these two enhancements! Hopefully it is being updated right now and we'll see a new printing this year! | Complete Reference guide - a must have, 2005-09-20 Reviewer rating: Cisco Cookbook is a a complete reference guide for field engineers and Network Administrators. The book has practically everything you need to know to competently configure cisco routers for a production environment. However, if you do not already have a working knowledge of Cisco networking technologies this book maybe over your head. For experienced Engineers and Administrators, the book is a must have for your desk reference.
Thomas Villarubia
CCNA CCNP | All is in there !!, 2005-05-26 Reviewer rating: If you are an administrator and you have forgotten details about a router configuration, that you need. this book will be the real lifesaver.
Basic and advanced router config have been included and all the topics are grouped and explained in a clear way.
I found Chapter 9:BGP very useful, showing a hard topic by using a easy to understand solutions.
Si eres un administrador y se te olvido detalles de una configuración, este libro realmente te ayudará.
Se han incluido configuraciones básicas y avanzadas y los temas están agrupados y se explican brevemente, pero muy claro.
Me intereso el capitulo 9 sobre BGP, en que muestra un tema difícil de entender, en una forma sencilla con ejemplos claros.
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