Internet Routing Architectures (CISCO)
- By Sam Halabi
- Published Apr 23, 1997 by Cisco Press. Part of the Cisco - Other series.
Book
- Sorry, this book is no longer in print.
- Copyright 1997
- Dimensions: 7.38 X 9.125
- Pages: 496
- Edition: 1st
- Book
- ISBN-10: 1-56205-652-2
- ISBN-13: 978-1-56205-652-0
This comprehensive reference explores the ins and outs of interdomain routing network designs. You will have all the information you need to make knowledgeable routing decisions for Internet connectivity in your environment. Using a practical, example-oriented approach, this resource provides you with real solutions for ISP connectivity issues. You will learn how to integrate your network on the global Internet and discover how to build large-scale autonomous systems. You will also learn to control expansion of interior routing protocols using BGP4 (Border Gateway Protocol), design sound and stable networks, configure the required policies using Cisco IOS software, and explore routing practices and rules on the Internet. Become an expert in data routing manipulation by using this book as your reference. Internet Routing Architectures--a complete resource for internet routing solutions and scenarios.
Table of Contents
I. THE CONTEMPORARY INTERNET.
1. Evolution of the Internet.
Origins of the Internet. The Internet Today. NSFNET Solicitations. Network Access Points. Route Arbiter Project. The very high speed Backbone Network Service (vBNS). Moving the Regional Providers. NSF Solicits NIS Managers. Other Internet Registries. Internetworking Routing Registries (IRR). Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions. References.
2. ISP Services and Characteristics.
ISP Services. ISP Pricing and Technical Characteristics. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions.
3. Handling IP Address Depletion.
Overview of IPv4 Addressing. Basic Addressing. IP Address Space Depletion. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions. References.
II. ROUTING PROTOCOL BASICS.
4. Interdomain Routing Basics.
Overview of Routers and Routing. Segregating the World into Administrations. Border Gateway Protocol Version. UPDATE Message and Routing Information. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions. References.
5. Tuning BGP Capabilities.
Building Peer Sessions. Sources of Routing Updates. Overlapping Protocols: Backdoors. The Routing Process Simplified. Controlling BGP Routes. Route Filtering and Attribute Manipulation. BGP4 Aggregation. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions. References.
III. EFFECTIVE INTERNET ROUTING DESIGNS.
6. Redundancy, Symmetry, and Load Balancing.
Redundancy. Symmetry. Load Balancing. Specific Scenarios: Designing Redundancy, Symmetry, and Load Balancing. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions.
7. Controlling Routing Inside and Autonomous System.
Interaction of Non-BGP Routers with BGP Routers. BGP Policies Conflicting with Internal Defaults. Policy Routing. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions.
8. Controlling Large Scale Autonomous Systems.
Route Reflectors. Confederations. Controlling IGP Expansion. Virtual Private Networks with Route Reflectors. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions. References.
9. Designing Stable Internets.
Route Instabilities on the Internet. BGP Stability Features. Looking Ahead. Frequently Asked Questions.
IV. INTERNET ROUTING DEVICE CONFIGURATION.
10. Configuring Basic BGP Functions and Attributes.
Building Peering Sessions. Route Filtering and Attribute Manipulation. Peer Groups. Sources of Routing Updates. Overlapping Protocols: (Backdoors). BGP Attributes. BGP4 Aggregation. Looking Ahead.
11. Configuring Effective Internet Routing Policies.
Redundancy, Symmetry, and Load Balancing. Following Defaults Inside an AS. Policy Routing. Route Reflectors. Confederations. Controlling Route and Cache Invalidation. Route Dampening. Looking Ahead.
Appendix A. RIPE 181.
RIPE Objects. Setting Policies in the AS Object. Finding Information in the Database.