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Title: Troubleshooting Campus Networks: Practical Analysis of Cisco and LAN Protocols by Priscilla Oppenheimer, Joseph Bardwell, Priscilla Oppenheimer, Joseph Bardwell ISBN: 0-471-21013-7 Publisher: Wiley Pub. Date: 19 July, 2002 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $65.00 |
Average Customer Rating: 5 (12 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: Super High Quality Book
Comment: I've been eagerly reading bits and pieces of my copy of this book ever since it arrived. The amount of highly accurate detail is incredible. I believe 90% of all network books are so sloppily written they're not worth buying. This book is clearly in the top 1% of well-written and informative books.
The book's style is also very clear and understandable. It passes my ultimate test: I can read it at 10-11 PM at night without falling asleep! Almost all of the formulas and binary are made accessible to those with high-school math skills. The book stays focused and contains references to other sources for details that aren't need-to-know or interesting.
Furthermore, the discussion contains valuable protocol and troubleshooting information, info that could be a big help to the
reader in solving real problems in their network. (Of course, a hierarchically designed network built per Oppenheimer's Cisco Press Top-Down Network Design book might not have such problems!)
The protocol analysis aspect also opens the reader's eyes to understanding common protocols and to possible protocol issues. If you don't have protocol analysis software, I hear good things about Ethereal, a free protocol analyzer package for Windows.
Finally, although the title doesn't mention Cisco, there is sample show command output from Cisco devices, also discussion of Cisco-specific information where necessary and appropriate. (The subtitle does include "Cisco" with "LAN protocols" after all.) The book clearly resists the temptation to, for example, pursue routing protocols too deeply, and stays focussed on the campus, providing a well-balanced coverage of troubleshooting for that setting.
Rating: 5
Summary: A myth-shattering, authoritative and enlightening title
Comment: I'm sad I waited so long to read this excellent book. "Troubleshooting Campus Networks" (TCN) was published in Jul 2002, and it belongs on every network administrator's shelf -- now! This is the best networking book since Scott Haugdahl's "Network Analysis and Troubleshooting" and Eric Hall's "Internet Core Protocols." TCN will truly test your networking knowledge; you'll quickly validate the truth and discard the fiction.
So many books discuss networks, but somehow distort subtle points. Authors Oppenheimer and Bardwell know their material inside-out and explain key points in clear, concise prose. Ever hear of the "37% utilization rule for Ethernet?" It's false. Think that TCP sequence numbers count packets? Wrong -- they count bytes of data. And why are sequence numbers seemingly "off by one?" Look at the difference between ordinal and cardinal numbers, described in ch. 9.
TCN displays an uncanny ability to include just the information that is needed. "Reversible half-ASCII," which accounts for odd-looking NetBIOS traces, appears in ch. 12. The sections on Windows networking are first-rate, with helpful comparisons of NetBIOS with IPX, TCP, and NetBEUI. Even theoretical but damaging attack methods, like corrupting Hot Standby Router Protocol messages (ch. 8), are illuminated.
I have two complaints. I would have liked more attention paid to the mechanics of analyzing traffic, including the use of taps. Also, the Windows chapter seemed to end abruptly, just when the dynamics of Windows 2000 networking and port 445 should have appeared.
TCN is designed to educate protocol analysts. People with this skill set can administer LANs, analyzer network-based IDS traffic, and deploy network infrastructure. I thank the authors for their efforts and look forward to their next endeavor.
Rating: 5
Summary: Good book for network admins
Comment: My overall impression was that this is a great book. I felt that the first chapter was unnecessary detail, and sort of seemed like chest thumping to me. I find this book to be an excellent reference about just about all aspects of LAN communications. I was not impressed with the WAN protocols however. I sort of expected more of that, as you might find in a Campus network. I keep this book handy, and often find myself using it as a reference when I am unsure of a conclusion I have drawn. I recommend this book to anyone looking for reference material.
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Title: Network Analysis and Troubleshooting by J. Scott Haugdahl ISBN: 0201433192 Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional Pub. Date: 15 January, 2000 List Price(USD): $49.99 |
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Title: Sniffer Pro Network Optimization and Troubleshooting Handbook by Robert J. Shimonski, Wally Eaton, Umer Khan, Yuri Gordienko ISBN: 1931836574 Publisher: Syngress Publishing Pub. Date: 31 July, 2002 List Price(USD): $49.95 |
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Title: Top-Down Network Design by Priscilla Oppenheimer ISBN: 1578700698 Publisher: Pearson Education Pub. Date: 15 August, 1999 List Price(USD): $55.00 |
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Title: Cisco Field Manual: Catalyst Switch Configuration by David Hucaby, Stephen McQuerry ISBN: 1587050439 Publisher: Pearson Education Pub. Date: 08 October, 2002 List Price(USD): $50.00 |
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Title: Cisco® Router Troubleshooting Handbook by Peter Rybaczyk ISBN: 0764546473 Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 24 February, 2000 List Price(USD): $29.99 |
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