Junos MPLS Fundamentals (JMF) Online
Voraussetzungen
- Strong general TCP/IP knowledge;
- knowledge of Junos OS to the JNCIA-Junos certification level; and
- Knowledge of routing and switching to the JNCIS-SP certification level.
- The following courses or equivalent knowledge:
Getting Started with Networking online course
Introduction to the Junos Operating System course
Junos Intermediate Routing course
Junos Enterprise Switching course, Junos Service Provider Switching course, or both
Zielgruppe
- Individuals responsible for designing, implementing, and troubleshooting MPLS networks that make use of RSVP and LDP as the signaling method for the creation of LSPs;
- Individuals who work with, or who aspire to work with, service prov…
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Voraussetzungen
- Strong general TCP/IP knowledge;
- knowledge of Junos OS to the JNCIA-Junos certification level; and
- Knowledge of routing and switching to the JNCIS-SP certification level.
- The following courses or equivalent knowledge:
Getting Started with Networking online course
Introduction to the Junos Operating System course
Junos Intermediate Routing course
Junos Enterprise Switching course, Junos Service Provider Switching course, or both
Zielgruppe
- Individuals responsible for designing, implementing, and troubleshooting MPLS networks that make use of RSVP and LDP as the signaling method for the creation of LSPs;
- Individuals who work with, or who aspire to work with, service provider networks;
- Individuals studying for the JNCIS-SP certification exam; and
- Individuals who have already passed the JNCISSP certification exam, and want to revise these concepts before attempting the JNCIE-SP certification exam
Detaillierter Kursinhalt
Day 1
Chapter 1: Course Introduction
Chapter 2: MPLS—Introduction
- Describe the BGP remote next-hop mechanic, and hop-by-hop forwarding
- Explain the original historical motivations for MPLS
- List the alternative modern use cases for MPLS
Chapter 3: MPLS—The Mechanics
- Explain how labels are built, and how they flow between routers
- Describe the end-to-end data plane of a packet across a label-switched path
- Summarize the four primary protocols that can build label-switched paths
Chapter 4: MPLS—Static LSPs and the Forwarding Plane
- Configure a service provider’s edge and core devices for MPLS
- Configure the headend router of an LSP and explain the impact this has on the router's inet.3 table
- Configure transit routers and verify their mpls.0 tables
- Lab 1: Static LSPs and the Forwarding Plane
Chapter 5: RSVP—Introduction
- Explain the purpose, features, and advantages of RSVP
- Configure a service provider network to be ready to host RSVP label-switched paths
Chapter 6: RSVP—Configuring A Basic LSP
- Configure and verify an RSVP label-switched path that follows the metrically best path
- Explain the purpose of MPLS self-ping
- Explain how an RSVP LSP is signaled and created
Chapter 7: RSVP—The Traffic Engineering Database
- Describe the purpose of the IS-IS/OSPF traffic engineering extensions
- Configure and verify an LSP that uses the traffic engineering database to calculate its path
- Explain the impact that loose and strict hops can have on an LSP
- Lab 2: RSVP LSPs
Day 2
Chapter 8: RSVP—LSP Bandwidth Reservation
- Describe the use cases for RSVP bandwidth reservations, and the Path message objects that are used
- Configure LSP bandwidth reservations, and verify how these reservations are advertised
Chapter 9: RSVP—LSP Priorities
- Describe problems that can be caused by RSVP LSP bandwidth reservations, and the solution offered by priority levels
- Describe the default RSVP LSP priority levels, and configure alternative settings
- Configure LSP soft preemption to avoid downtime
- Lab 3: RSVP—LSP Bandwidth and Priorities
Chapter 10: RSVP—Constrained Shortest Path First, and Admin Groups
- Describe the CSPF algorithm, along with its tie breakers
- Configure and verify admin groups on LSPs
Chapter 11: RSVP—LSP Failures, Errors, and Session Maintenance
- Describe the events that can tear down an LSP, and the RSVP messages that make it happen
- Describe how RSVP has changed over the years from a soft-state protocol to a reliable stateful protocol
Chapter 12: RSVP—Primary and Secondary Paths
- Explain the use cases and configuration for primary and secondary paths
- Identify the benefits and trade-offs of standby secondary paths
- Show the advantage of pre-installing backup paths to the forwarding table
Chapter 13: RSVP—Local Repair, Part 1—One-to-One Backup or Fast Reroute
- Demonstrate the downtime that can be caused by a link or node failure in an MPLS network, and how a local repair path can significantly reduce this downtime
- Explain the mechanics of the one-to-one backup method
- Explain the many different meanings of the term “fast reroute”
- Configure and verify the one-to-one backup method of local repair
Chapter 14: RSVP—Local Repair, Part 2—One-to-One Backup or Fast Reroute
- Demonstrate the downtime that can be caused by a link or node failure in an MPLS network, and how a local repair path can significantly reduce this downtime
- Explain the mechanics of the one-to-one backup method
- Explain the many different meanings of the term “fast reroute”
- Configure and verify the one-to-one backup method of local repair
- Lab 5: RSVP—One-to-One Backup and Facility Backup
Day 3
Chapter 15: RSVP—LSP Optimization
- Describe the LSP optimization algorithm and how to configure this feature
Chapter 16: RSVP—Make-Before-Break and Adaptive
- Describe the make-before-break mechanic, and list the features that use this mechanic by default
- Explain how shared explicit signaling can prevent double-counting of bandwidth, and configure this feature for all other LSPs
Chapter 17: LDP—The Label Distribution Protocol
- Describe the key features, advantages, and trade-offs of LDP
- Explain the particular methods by which LDP generates and advertises MPLS labels
Chapter 18: LDP—Configuration
- Configure a basic LDP deployment, and describe the protocol messages that this configuration generates
- Verify the interface messages, sessions, and labels that this configuration generatesLab 4: RSVP— Primary and Secondary Paths
Chapter 19: LDP—Enhancements and Best Practices
- Explain the LDP-IGP Synchronization feature that reduces dropped packets during topology changes
- Describe how the BGP next-hop resolution process can be altered in LDP
- Configure session protection to improve the integrity of LDP during network failure
Chapter 20: LDP—Egress, Import, and Export Policies
- Configure and verify LDP egress policies to advertise any FEC of your choosing
- Configure and verify LDP import and export policies to limit the distribution of FECs
- Lab 6: LDP—Label Distribution Protocol
Chapter 20: Appendix: Segment Routing
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