
Junos Enterprise Routing
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Inhalt
- Intro
- Table of Contents
- About the Authors
- About the Technical Reviewers, Second Edition
- About the Lead Technical Reviewers, First Edition
- Preface
- What Is Enterprise Routing?
- Juniper Networks Technical Certification Program (JNTCP)
- How to Use This Book
- What's in This Book?
- Topology of This Book
- Conventions Used in This Book
- Using Code Examples
- Safari® Books Online
- How to Contact Us
- Acknowledgments
- From the First Edition
- From Doug Marschke
- From Harry Reynolds
- For the Second Edition
- From Doug Marschke and Harry Reynolds
- From Peter Southwick
- Chapter 1. Junos in the Enterprise Network
- Introduction to Junos Enterprise Routing
- Junos Overview
- Junos Releases
- CLI Review
- General CLI features
- Routing Features
- Routing modifiers
- Switching Features
- Security Features
- Routing Platforms
- Speeds and Feeds
- MX Series 3D Universal Edge Routers
- Switching Platforms
- SRX Series Services Gateways
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 2. Enterprise Design
- Design Guidelines
- Technological Goals of Network Design
- Legacy Network Design
- The New Network
- Dual Star Internet Access
- Existing Internet Access Design
- Design Goals and Constraints
- Solution: Dual Internet Access Design
- Data Center and Disaster Recovery (DR) Architecture
- Multitier Data Center Design
- Goals and Constraints
- Solution: Data Center Design
- Campus Architecture
- Legacy Campus Backbone
- Goals and Constraints
- Solution: Campus Network
- Conclusion: Design Best Practices
- Chapter 3. Juniper Switching and Routing Platforms
- Enterprise Network Roles
- Screening Router
- Security Gateway
- Internet Border Router
- Single link
- Dual links, single router
- Dual links, dual routers
- Internet border router device options
- Core Routers
- Core router device options
- Access Router
- Access router options
- Multiservices Gateway
- Device Limitations
- M-series
- J-series
- MX edge routers
- EX switches
- SRX Services Gateway
- L2 and L3 Deployments
- Link Aggregation Groups
- VPLS Implementation
- Miscellaneous Protocols
- Spanning tree protocol
- Fibre channel
- Bidirectional forwarding detection
- All-in-One Versus Components
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 4. Interfaces
- Permanent Interfaces
- Transient Interfaces
- Interface Naming
- Media type
- Chassis slot number
- PIC slot number
- Port number
- Logical unit and channel numbers
- Interface Properties
- Physical Properties
- Logical Properties
- Interface Configuration Examples
- Gigabit Ethernet Interface
- Gigabit Ethernet with VLAN Tagging
- T1 Interface with Cisco HDLC Encapsulation
- Serial Interface with PPP
- Serial Interface with Frame Relay
- ADSL Using PPPoE over ATM
- MLPPP
- Aggregated Ethernet
- GRE
- VRRP
- Interface Troubleshooting
- Address Configuration Issues
- Encapsulation Mismatches
- Path MTU Issues
- Looped Interfaces
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 5. Protocol Independent Properties and Routing Policy
- Protocol Independent Properties
- Static, Aggregate, and Generated Routes
- Next hop types
- Static versus aggregate routes
- Forwarding next hop qualifiers
- Aggregates need contributing routes
- Aggregate versus generated routes
- Route attributes and flags
- Global Route Preference
- Floating static routes
- Martian Routes
- Routing Tables and RIB Groups
- Default route tables
- User-defined RIBs and RIB groups
- Router ID and Antonymous System Number
- Router ID
- Autonomous system number
- Summary of Protocol-Independent Properties
- Routing Policy
- What Is a Routing Policy, and When Do I Need One?
- Where and How Is Policy Applied?
- Applying policy to link state routing protocols
- Applying policy to BGP and RIP
- Policy Components
- Logical OR and AND functions within terms
- Policy Match Criteria and Actions
- Policy match criteria
- Policy actions
- Route Filters
- Binary trees
- Route filters and match types
- Longest match wins, but may not.
- Default Policies
- OSPF (and IS-IS) default policy
- RIP default policy
- BGP default policy
- Advanced Policy Concepts
- Testing policy results
- Community and AS path regex matching
- Policy subroutines (nesting)
- Boolean grouping
- Summary of Routing Policy
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 6. Interior Gateway Protocols and Migration Strategies
- IGP Overview
- Routing Information Protocol
- Stability and performance tweaks
- RIP and RIPv2
- Open Shortest Path First
- Neighbors and adjacencies
- The designated router
- OSPF router types
- Areas and LSAs
- OSPF area types
- Primary LSA types
- OSPF stability and performance tweaks
- Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol
- EIGRP metrics
- EIGRP: A grand past and a dubious future
- IGP Summary
- RIP Deployment Scenario
- Existing RIP Configuration
- Baseline Operation
- Summary of RIP Requirements
- Enter Juniper Networks
- Configure static routes
- Configure RIP
- Ale's RIP configuration
- Confirm RIP Operation: Ale and Lager
- Confirm RIP: Juniper Networks to Cisco Systems Integration
- Confirm route exchange
- Confirm forwarding path
- RIP troubleshooting scenario
- The Problem
- RIP Deployment Summary
- IGP Migration
- IGP Migration: Common Techniques and Concerns
- IGP Migration Models
- The Overlay Model
- The Redistribution Model
- The Integration Model
- IGP Migration Summary
- Overlay Migration Scenario: RIP to OSPF
- RIP-to-OSPF Migration: Cutover to OSPF
- Before You Go, Can You Set Up Area 1 Real Quick?
- A final task: Aggregate network summaries into the backbone
- RIP Migration with the Overlay Model Summary
- EIGRP-to-OSPF Migration
- Mutual Route Redistribution
- The Junos OSPF configuration
- The IOS configuration
- Confirm EIGRP/OSPF Mutual Route Redistribution
- Troubleshoot a preference issue
- EIGRP-to-OSPF Migration Summary
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 7. Border Gateway Protocol and Enterprise Routing Policy
- What Is BGP?
- Inter-AS Routing
- BGP Route Attributes
- BGP Path Selection
- Internal and External BGP
- Scaling IBGP with Route Reflection
- Route reflection and redundancy
- Scaling IBGP: Confederations
- BGP and the Enterprise
- When Should an Enterprise Run BGP?
- A word about AS numbers
- ASN Portability
- Dual-homed: Single versus multiple providers
- Asymmetric Link Speed Support
- Which Routers Should Run IBGP?
- No Transit Services
- The Impact of Accepting Specifics Versus a Default from Your Provider
- Summary of Enterprise BGP Requirements
- BGP Deployment: Asymmetric Load Balancing
- Validate Baseline Operation
- Configure Generated Route
- Configure Initial BGP Peering
- Configure Initial BGP Policy
- Use BGP for Asymmetric Load Balancing
- Initial BGP Peering Summary
- Enterprise Routing Policy
- Inbound and Outbound Routing Policies
- Common Policy Design Criteria
- A word on outbound/inbound versus export/import policy
- Know your ISP's policy
- Enterprise Policy Summary
- Multihome Beer-Co
- Implement Beer-Co's Outbound Policy
- EBGP Peering to AS 420
- Export Beer-Co Aggregate to Borgnet
- Monitor system load
- IBGP Peering Within AS 1282
- Troubleshoot an IBGP peering problem
- Configure route reflection
- Troubleshoot BGP next hop reachability
- Confirm Outbound Policy Operation
- Dual-Homing and Outbound Policy Summary
- Inbound Policy
- AS Path Prepend to Influence Nonadjacent AS Path Selection
- Use Communities to Influence Peer AS
- BGP Inbound Policy Summary
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 8. Access Security
- Security Concepts
- Summary of Security Concepts
- Securing Access to the Router
- User Authentication
- Remote Access
- Summary of Access Security
- Firewall Filters
- Filter Processing
- Filter Match Conditions
- Can your mother read this?
- Filter Actions
- Applying a Filter
- Case Study: Transit Filters
- Case Study: Loopback Filters
- Policers
- Burst-size limit mystery
- Policer actions
- Configuring and applying policers
- Policer example
- Summary of Firewall Filters and Policers
- Spoof Prevention (uRPF)
- Summary of Spoof Prevention
- Monitoring the Router
- Syslog
- Case study: Syslog
- SNMP
- NTP
- Is NTP Really Working?
- Summary of Router Monitoring
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 9. Junos Layer 2 Services
- Junos Services
- Layer 2 Services
- Multilink PPP
- Multiclass MLPPP
- CRTP
- Multilink Frame Relay
- GRE
- Ethernet Aggregation
- Switching Services
- Additional Service Options
- Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP)
- Real-Time Performance Monitoring (RPM)
- Data Link Switching (DLSw)
- Flow Monitoring
- Tunnel Services
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 10. Class of Service
- What Is IP CoS, and Why Do I Need It?
- Why IP Networks Need CoS
- Circuit-switching inefficiencies
- CoS Terms and Concepts
- Network QoS parameters
- Classification
- Loss priority
- Packet marking/rewriting
- Forwarding classes, queues, and schedulers
- Schedulers
- Congestion management
- Weighted RED
- Policing and shaping
- Isolation is needed to preserve CoS
- Policing versus shaping
- Summary of CoS processing steps
- IP CoS Summary
- IP Differentiated Services
- IP ToS
- Enter IP Integrated Services
- IP Differentiated Services
- DiffServ Terminology
- DiffServ PHBs
- DiffServ Summary
- CoS Capabilities
- Input Processing
- BA classification capabilities
- Multifield classification
- Policing
- CoS policy
- Output Processing
- Egress policing
- Rewrite marking
- Scheduling and queuing
- Scheduling discipline
- Scheduler configuration
- Delay Buffer Size
- Scheduler Maps
- A word on per-unit scheduling
- Congestion control
- Configure WRED drop profiles
- Differences Between Junos CoS
- Per-unit scheduling
- Weight- versus priority-based scheduling
- The weight-based scheduler
- The priority-based scheduler
- Virtual channels
- Adaptive shaping
- Junos Software CoS Defaults
- Four forwarding classes, but only two queues
- BA and rewrite marker templates
- CoS Summary
- DiffServ CoS Deployment and Verification
- Why Not Test CoS with Control-Plane-Generated Traffic?
- Cannot control classification of locally generated traffic
- Enter resource performance monitoring
- Configure DiffServ-Based CoS
- Multifield classification and policing (task 1)
- BA classification and rewriting (task 2)
- CoS shaping (task 3)
- Scheduler definition and application (task 4)
- Weight-based scheduler definition
- Priority-based scheduler definition
- An Alternative Priority-Based Scheduler Approach
- Define RED Profiles
- Scheduler application
- Activate multifield classification
- The complete configuration
- Verify DiffServ-Based CoS
- Confirm general CoS configuration
- Confirm classification and queuing
- Multifield classification
- BA classification
- Confirm that all this CoS stuff actually does something
- No CoS benchmark
- The CoS benchmark
- DiffServ Deployment Summary
- Adaptive Shapers and Virtual Channels
- Configure Adaptive Shaping
- Virtual Channels
- Configure virtual channels
- Adaptive Shaping and Virtual Channel Summary
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 11. IP Multicast in the Enterprise
- What Is Multicast?
- Multicast Applications
- Locating content
- Multicast Terminology and Concepts
- Routing turned upside down
- Multicast terms
- Additional multicast building blocks
- Multicast addressing
- Mapping IP Multicast to Link Layer Multicast
- Multicast addressing and administrative scoping
- Interface lists
- Reverse path forwarding
- Distribution trees
- Shortest-path tree (SPT)
- Shared trees and RPs
- Switching from a shared tree to an SPT
- Multicast Terminology Summary
- Multicast Protocols
- Group Management Protocols
- IGMPv3
- PIM
- PIM versions
- PIM components
- RP discovery
- PIM modes
- Dense mode
- Sparse mode
- PIM messages
- Source-specific multicast
- The designated router
- PIM assert
- Multicast Protocol Summary
- PIM Sparse Mode: Static RP
- Validate the Baseline IGP Forwarding Path
- Configure PIM Sparse Mode with Static RP
- Configure PIM on the RP
- Configure PIM on remaining routers
- Verify RPF
- Configure the simulated receiver
- A Word on Multicast Client Options
- Static IGMP membership
- Create a listening multicast process
- Generate multicast traffic
- PIM Sparse Mode with Static RP Summary
- Configure PIM Sparse Mode with Bootstrap RP
- Troubleshoot a Bootstrap Problem
- Extra points for creativity?
- PIM Sparse Mode with Bootstrap RP Summary
- PIM-Based Anycast-RP
- Configure Anycast-RP
- Configure static RP on non-RP routers
- Configure the Anycast-RPs
- Verify the Anycast-RPs
- What about MSDP?
- PIM Sparse Mode with Anycast-RP Summary
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Chapter 12. Junos Security Services
- Junos Software and Security
- Do I Need a Router or a Security Device?
- Best-of-breed routing and security services
- Security-Based Enterprise Scenario
- Packet- Versus Flow-Based Processing
- Architecture Changes
- Adding flow-based forwarding
- Flows and sessions
- Junos security packet walk
- Junos Security Summary
- Understanding Junos Operational Modes
- Switching between secure and router contexts
- Default configurations
- Operational modes summary
- Security Features
- Branch Office and Data Center SRXs
- Common feature set
- Security policies
- Policy creation
- Rule 1: All employees are allowed to access the Internet for all purposes
- Rule 2: All Internet users are allowed to access the Beer-Co web server
- Rule 3: All Internet DNS servers are allowed to access the Beer-Co DNS server
- Rule 4: All Internet email servers are allowed to access the Beer-Co email server
- Rule 5: All employees are allowed to access the servers on the DMZ
- Rule 6: The DNS and email servers are allowed to access the Internet for their respective services
- Rule 7: All employees are allowed to transit the firewall to another employee
- Testing policies
- Security traffic logs
- Security policy summary
- Network Address Translation
- Static NAT
- Source NAT
- Destination NAT
- NAT summary
- Virtual Private Networks
- Virtual private networks summary
- Attack Detection and Prevention
- Configuring screens
- Attack detection and prevention summary
- Clustering
- Clustering components
- Clustering configuration
- Verifying clustering
- Clustering summary
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Chapter Review Questions
- Chapter Review Answers
- Appendix A. Junos Layer 3 Services
- Layer 3 Services
- Stateful Firewall
- Application Layer Gateways
- Network Address Translation
- Intrusion Detection Services
- IPSec VPN
- Layer 3 Services Summary
- Layer 3 Services Configuration
- Logging and Tracing
- Layer 3 Services Configuration Summary
- IPSec VPNs
- Example IPSec Tunnel Configuration
- Interface-style service set
- Next hop-style service set
- IPSec over GRE
- Summary of IPSec VPNs
- NAT
- Source NAT with No PAT
- Source NAT with PAT
- Destination NAT
- NAT and the stateful firewall
- Twice NAT
- Summary of NAT
- IDS
- Combining Services
- Stateful Firewall, NAT, and IPSec over GRE Together
- The Life of a Packet
- Considerations Regarding Order of Operations
- Conclusion
- Exam Topics
- Appendix Review Questions
- Appendix Review Answers
- Appendix B. Upgrading Junos
- Migrating to a Newer Version of Junos
- Free Up Space
- Confirm that you have enough compact flash space
- Install the Junos Upgrade
- Using a USB drive to load a new image
- Upgrading from a USB drive when the compact flash is not large enough
- Loading an SRX from a USB drive
- Upgrade Summary
- Index
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