Designing Cisco Enterprise Networks v1.0

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Course Details

Designing Cisco Enterprise Networks (ENSLD) v1.0

Course code: ENSLD v1

Duration: 5 Days


Prerequisite:

•    Basic network fundamentals and building simple LANs
•    Basic IP addressing and subnets
•    Routing and switching fundamentals
•    Basic wireless networking concepts and terminology

Course Description:

The Designing Cisco Enterprise Networks (ENSLD) v1.0 course gives you the knowledge and skills you need to design an enterprise network. This course serves as a deep dive into enterprise network design and expands on the topics covered in the Implementing and Operating Cisco® Enterprise Network Core Technologies (ENCOR) v1.0 course. 

Course Objectives:

After taking this course, you should be able to:

•    Design Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) internal routing for the enterprise network
•    Design Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) internal routing for the enterprise network
•    Design Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) internal routing for the enterprise network
•    Design a network based on customer requirements
•    Design Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routing for the enterprise network
•    Describe the different types and uses of Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) address families
•    Describe BGP load sharing
•    Design a BGP network based on customer requirements
•    Decide where the L2/L3 boundary will be in your Campus network and make design decisions
•    Describe Layer 2 design considerations for Enterprise Campus networks
•    Design a LAN network based on customer requirements
•    Describe Layer 3 design considerations in an Enterprise Campus network
•    Examine Cisco SD-Access fundamental concepts
•    Describe Cisco SD-Access Fabric Design
•    Design an Software-Defined Access (SD-Access) Campus Fabric based on customer requirements
•    Design service provider-managed VPNs
•    Design enterprise-managed VPNs
•    Design a resilient WAN
•    Design a resilient WAN network based on customer requirements
•    Examine the Cisco SD-WAN architecture
•    Describe Cisco SD-WAN deployment options
•    Design Cisco SD-WAN redundancy
•    Explain the basic principles of QoS
•    Design Quality of Service (QoS) for the WAN
•    Design QoS for enterprise network based on customer requirements
•    Explain the basic principles of multicast
•    Designing rendezvous point distribution solutions
•    Describe high-level considerations when doing IP addressing design
•    Create an IPv6 addressing plan
•    Plan an IPv6 deployment in an existing enterprise IPv4 network
•    Describe the challenges that you might encounter when transitioning to IPv6
•    Design an IPv6 addressing plan based on customer requirements    •    Describe Network APIs and protocols
•    Describe Yet Another Next Generation (YANG), Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF), and Representational State Transfer Configuration Protocol (RESTCONF)

Intended Audience:
•    Network design engineers
•    Network engineers
•    System administrators


Course Outlines:

•    Designing EIGRP Routing
•    Designing OSPF Routing
•    Designing IS-IS Routing
•    Designing BGP Routing and Redundancy
•    Understanding BGP Address Families
•    Designing the Enterprise Campus LAN
•    Designing the Layer 2 Campus
•    Designing the Layer 3 Campus
•    Discovering the Cisco SD-Access Architecture
•    Exploring Cisco SD-Access Fabric Design
•    Designing Service Provider-Managed VPNs
•    Designing Enterprise-Managed VPNs
•    Designing WAN Resiliency
•    Examining Cisco SD-WAN Architectures
•    Cisco SD-WAN Deployment Design Considerations
•    Designing Cisco SD-WAN Routing and High Availability
•    Understanding QoS
•    Designing LAN and WAN QoS
•    Exploring Multicast with Protocol-Independent Multicast-Sparse Mode
•    Designing Rendezvous Point Distribution Solutions
•    Designing an IPv4 Address Plan
•    Exploring IPv6
•    Deploying IPv6
•    Introducing Network APIs and Protocols
•    Exploring YANG, NETCONF, RESTCONF, and Model-Driven Telemetry