Linux TCP/IP Network Administration |  | Author: Scott Mann Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $54.99 Buy New: $8.99 as of 9/9/2010 03:52 CDT details You Save: $46.00 (84%)
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Seller: Scouter Page's Book Shop Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 1327944
Media: Paperback Pages: 880 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.9 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7 x 2.3
ISBN: 0130322202 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 UPC: 076092010708 EAN: 9780130322203 ASIN: 0130322202
Publication Date: July 26, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Linux TCP/IP Network Administration offers a comprehensive tutorial on the fundamentals of Linux TCP/IP networking for new and intermediate-level network administrators, detailed coverage of advanced topics for experienced administrators, and comprehensive reference material on the entire TCP/IP protocol stack for all Linux professionals. Long-time Linux netadmin Scott Mann covers the Linux TCP/IP protocol stack from bottom to top, offering practical, up-to-date guidance for implementing, managing, and troubleshooting any TCP/IP network or application. Linux TCP/IP Network Administration includes detailed coverage of routing, routing table management daemons such as RIPv2 and OSPF, as well as new routing policy and traffic control capabilities available through iproute2. Mann also walks through implementing, securing, and troubleshooting each major network application, including DNS, NIS, LDAP, DHCP, NFS, sendmail, NFS, and Samba.
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| Customer Reviews: Appropriate for experienced, intriguing for novice July 13, 2002 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
If you need to know about IP routing on UNIX system, this is the book. This book is appropriate for experienced system administrator and intriguing for the novice. The author started on glimpse of TCP/IP, then continuing to UNIX commands and detail explainations that appropriate for routing and the commands. Although the book title mentioned "LINUX", this book is also applicable to any UNIX system (including BSD, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX, Mac OS X). Any system administrator should not have trouble adjusting command to a more-specific UNIX system (if any). If previous reviewer commented that this book could be useful for preparing CCIE exam, I could agree with that. But I think this book is more appropriate for preparing CCNA exam since the book's content is not "too advanced" (not sophisticated enough). If you are not preparing for the exam, you still could learning a lot. From this book at least you could get ideas of how major protocols (like RIP, OSPF, and BGP) getting around on a network without having a vendor router (such as Cisco router) installed. You could also learn about NAT and firewalls. If you think this book is "too easy", you might try the followings. For the ARP packets, have W. Richard Steven's "TCP/IP Illustrated Vol. 1: The Protocols". Need more info on firewalls? Try "Building Internet Firewalls" by Elizabeth Zwicky, "Linux Firewalls" by Robert Ziegler, and "Intrusion Signatures and Analysis" by Mark Cooper. Feel not enough background? Get "Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol. 1: Principles, Protocols, and Architecture" by Douglas Comer for the TCP/IP part. For the system administration part, have "UNIX System Administration Handbook" by Evi Nemeth. In between? Try "TCP/IP Network Administration" by Craig Hunt.
SUPERB: Lots of "meat", even OSPF & BGP! August 20, 2001 Ron C. 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
If you want to learn lots of advanced protocol details, then this is a "must-have". I think the OSPF & BGP chapters alone are worth the price. [Let me (...) know if you know of any other books on gated; this might even be an idea for CCIE study!]
A good book, but NOT for cisco certifications August 2, 2002 echidna (Missoula, MT USA) 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
Linux TCP/IP Network Administration is a very comprehensive book. It starts out easy talking about OSI layer models, defining crucial buzzwords, explaining various hardware options, and generally attempting to fill in possible gaps in your background. It's easy if you don't have any gaps, but by the time we get to dynamic routing protocols it gets thick and heavy for everyone. The book did have quite a few typos. Write to me if you want my incomplete list. The best chapter (if you're new to this stuff) is chapter six. It really nails how routing tables work. Chapter 10 (covers DHCP Samba and Sendmail) is too much for one chapter and he can't get into enough depth much more than to give out some buzzwords. The later chapters go into configuring routed and gated for the various distance-vector and link-state routing protocols, and finally he ends up discussing QoS and other software that I haven't had a chance to play with yet. Ditto for IPv6. No matter how much we say it's coming it's still gonna rock things when it finally sweeps over. This book is great if you want to hook up heterogeneous or homogeneous networks with linux servers, routers, and/or clients. As it goes along, it drops names of software you might need (both GUI and CLI based) and tells you where to get it. It tries not to focus TOO much on one Linux distro or another, though the author clearly has his favorites. The chapters on OSPF and BGP are a great introduction to the theory of these routing protocols. However this book will not tell you how cisco does even the simplest thing and therefore will not directly help you get even your CCNA. It is useful background when studying more advanced cisco certs because sometimes when you read a cisco press book you lose the forest for the trees, and going back and forth between how you configure gated for OSPF and how Cisco does it will give you a clearer idea of what OSPF is REALLY all about (for those who care.)
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