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Course Outline
Objectives:
- Explain encapsulation, de-encapsulation, and modularity within the TCP/IP protocol stack.
- Identify and describe the fields and flags found in the IP header.
- Explain IP address classes A, B, and C.
- Utilize subnet masks to determine the network portion of an IP address.
- Differentiate between classful and classless IP addressing schemes.
- Describe the function of an IP router and the application of static versus dynamic routing.
- Compare distance vector (RIP) and link-state (OSPF) routing protocols.
- Explain IP subnetworking.
- Clarify supernetting, VLSM, and CIDR concepts.
- Utilize ICMP, along with tools like ping and traceroute, for network connectivity verification.
- Explain the role of DHCP in dynamic IP addressing.
- Use ARP to map IP addresses to MAC addresses.
- Explain the function of DNS within TCP/IP networks.
- Identify and describe the fields and flags within TCP and UDP headers.
- Explain how TCP ensures end-to-end reliability across an unreliable IP network.
- Describe congestion avoidance mechanisms in TCP/IP networks.
- Explain Transport Layer Security (TLS).
Practical Exercises:
Lab Exercise 1: Connectivity and Testing.
Lab Exercise 2: DHCP and DNS.
Lab Exercise 3: Checking ARP cache.
Lab Exercise 4: Fragmentation.
Lab Exercise 5: Traceroute.
Lab Exercise 6: Routing.
Lab Exercise 7: Subnetting.
Lab Exercise 8: TCP Options.
Lab Exercise 9: TLS.
28 Hours
Testimonials (1)
communication, knowledge from experience, solve problems,