In 1994, W. Richard Stevens and Addison-Wesley published a networking classic: TCP/IP Illustrated. The model for that book was a brilliant, unfettered approach to networking concepts that has proven itself over time to be popular with readers of beginning to intermediate networking knowledge. The Illustrated Network takes this time-honored approach and modernizes it by creating not only a much larger and more complicated network, but also by incorporating all the networking advancements that have taken place since the mid-1990s, which are many. This book takes the popular Stevens approach and modernizes it, employing 2008 equipment, operating systems, and router vendors. It presents an ?illustrated? explanation of how TCP/IP works with consistent examples from a real, working network configuration that includes servers, routers, and workstations. Diagnostic traces allow the reader to follow the discussion with unprecedented clarity and precision. True to the title of the book, there are 330+ diagrams and screen shots, as well as topology diagrams and a unique repeating chapter opening diagram. Illustrations are also used as end-of-chapter questions. A complete and modern network was assembled to write this book, with all the material coming from real objects connected and running on the network, not assumptions. Presents a real world networking scenario the way the reader sees them in a device-agnostic world. Doesnt preach one platform or the other. Here are ten key differences between the two: Stevens Goralskis Older operating systems (AIX,svr4,etc.) Newer OSs (XP, Linux, FreeBSD, etc.) Two routers (Cisco, Telebit (obsolete)) Two routers (M-series, J-series) Slow Ethernet and SLIP link Fast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet, and SONET/SDH links (modern) Tcpdump for traces Newer, better utility to capture traces (Ethereal, now has a new name!) No IPSec IPSec No multicast Multicast No router security discussed Firewall routers detailed No Web Full Web browser HTML consideration No IPv6 IPv6 overview Few configuration details More configuration details (ie, SSH, SSL, MPLS, ATM/FR consideration, wireless LANS, OSPF and BGP routing protocols * New Modern Approach to Popular Topic Adopts the popular Stevens approach and modernizes it, giving the reader insights into the most up-to-date network equipment, operating systems, and router vendors. * Shows and Tells Presents an illustrated explanation of how TCP/IP works with consistent examples from a real, working network configuration that includes servers, routers, and workstations, allowing the reader to follow the discussion with unprecedented clarity and precision. * Over 330 Illustrations True to the title, there are 330 diagrams, screen shots, topology diagrams, and a unique repeating chapter opening diagram to reinforce concepts * Based on Actual Networks A complete and modern network was assembled to write this book, with all the material coming from real objects connected and running on the network, bringing the real world, not theory, into sharp focus.
Author(s): Walter Goralski
Series: The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Networking
Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 829
Cover......Page 1
Contents......Page 8
Foreword......Page 22
Preface......Page 24
About the Author......Page 31
Protocols and Layers 1......Page 34
TCP/IP Protocols and Devices 2......Page 78
Network Link Technologies 3......Page 102
IPv4 and IPv6 Addressing 4......Page 140
Address Resolution Protocol 5......Page 174
IPv4 and IPv6 Headers 6......Page 196
Internet Control Message Protocol 7......Page 220
Routing 8......Page 248
Forwarding IP Packets 9......Page 268
User Datagram Protocol 10......Page 290
Transmission Control Protocol 11......Page 310
Multiplexing and Sockets 12......Page 332
Routing and Peering 13......Page 352
IGPs: RIP, OSPF, and IS–IS 14......Page 376
Border Gateway Protocol 15......Page 410
Multicast 16......Page 434
MPLS and IP Switching 17......Page 462
Dynamic Host Conf guration Protocol 18......Page 490
The Domain Name System 19......Page 514
File Transfer Protocol 20......Page 540
SMTP and Email 21......Page 566
Hypertext Transfer Protocol 22......Page 590
Securing Sockets with SSL 23......Page 616
Simple Network Management Protocol 24......Page 640
Secure Shell (Remote Access) 25......Page 664
MPLS-Based Virtual Private Networks 26......Page 690
Network Address Translation 27......Page 712
Firewalls 28......Page 728
IP Security 29......Page 744
Voice over Internet Protocol 30......Page 766
List of Acronyms......Page 788
Bibliography......Page 798
Index......Page 800