Internetworkz is one of the pioneers of quality network engineering training in India. We are an authorized Cisco training centre with state of the art technology labs, one of the very few capable of delivery the premium Cisco Certification training namely, the CCIE (Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert), the highest reward from Cisco and the most prestigious and sought of after technology certification in the world. Internetworkz provides the right ambience for learning and research and with its friendly staff and facilities, making it one of the CCIE training centres in the world. We attract a lot of International students from the West, Africa, Europe, Australia, and the Middle East. We have several first attempt graduates which only prove the quality of our training. You are welcome to visit our CCIE Hall of Fame and see a few of our CCIE granduates.
We have special bootcmaps arranged every month for 30 days. Please go to our Course / Batch Schedulelink as check for details
The CCIE ( Cisco Certified Internetwork expert ) certification indicates an expert-level knowledge and skills in an individual. There are no specific prerequisites for attempting this certification exam. The exam comprises of two parts, a written exam followed by an 8-hour hands-on lab examination that requires you to configure a series of complex networks to given specifications. Candidates are expected to diagnose and solve issues and hence need a good knowledge of troubleshooting tools and techniques.
CCIE R&S identifies an expert knowledge of networking across LAN and WAN interfaces and a variety of routers and switches. These experts are called to solve complex connectivity problems to increase bandwidth, improve response times, maximize performance, and support global operations. The topics covered include: General Networking Theory, Bridging and LAN Switching, IP, IP Routing, QoS, WAN, IP Multicast, Security, MPLS, IPv6 among others. For the lab exam, you can expect the following topics:
The contents of the training are given below
I. General Networking Theory
A. General Routing Concepts
1. Link State and Distance Vector Protocols
2. Split Horizon
3. Summarization
4. Classful and a Classless routing protocol
5. Routing decision criteria
B. Routing Information Base (RIB) and Routing Protocols Interaction
1. Administrative Distance
2. Routing Table
3. RIB and Forwarding Information Base interaction
C. Redistribution
1. Redistribution between routing
Troubleshooting routing loop
II. Bridging and LAN Switching
A. Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)
1. 802.1d
2. 802.1w
3. 802.1s
4. Loopguard
5. Rootguard
6. Bridge Protocol Data Unit (BPDU) Guard
7. Storm Control
8. Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP)
9. Unicast flooding
10. STP port roles, failure propagation and loopguard operation
B. LAN Switching
1. Trunks
2. VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP) administrative functions
C. Ethernet
1. Speed
2. Duplex
3. Ethernet
4. Fast Ethernet
5. Gigabit Ethernet
III. IP (Internet Protocol)
A. Addressing
1. Subnetting
2. Hot Standby Routing Protocol (HSRP)
3. Gateway Load Balancing Protocol (GLBP)
4. Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)
5. Network Address Translation (NAT)
B. Services
1. Network Time Protocol (NTP)
2. Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP)
3. Web Cache Communication Protocol (WCCP)
C. Network Management
1. Logging and Syslog
IV. IP Routing
A. OSPF
1. Standard OSPF area
2. Stub area
3. Totally stub area
4. Not-so-stubby-area (NSSA)
5. Totally NSSA
6. Link State Advertisement (LSA) types
7. Adjacency on a point-to-point and on a multi-access (broadcast)
8. OSPF graceful restart
9. Troubleshooting failing adjacency formation to fail
10. Troubleshooting of external route installation in the RIB
B. BGP
1. Protocol on which BGP peers communicate
2. Next Hop
3. Peering
4. Troubleshooting of BGP route that will not install in the routing table
C. EIGRP
1. Best path
2. Loop free paths
3. EIGRP operations when alternate loop free paths are available and when it is not available
4. EIGRP queries
5. Manual summarization
6. Auto-summarization
7. EIGRP Stubs
8. Troubleshooting of EIGRP neighbor adjacencies
D. Policy Routing
1. Concept of policy routing
V. QoS
A. Modular QoS command-line (MQC) applied to:
1. Network-Based Application Recognition (NBAR)
2. Class-based weighted fair queueing (CBWFQ) / Modified Deficit Round Robin (MDRR)
3. Policing
4. Shaping
5. Marking
6. Random Early Detection (RED)
VI. WAN
A. Frame Relay
1. Local Management Interface (LMI)
2. Traffic Shaping
3. HUB and Spoke routers
4. Dynamic Multipoint VPN (DMVPN)
5. DE
VII. IP Multicast
A. Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) v2
B. Group addresses
C. Shared Trees
D. Source Trees
E. Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Mechanic
F. PIM Sparse Mode
G. Auto-RP
H. Anycast RP
VIII. Security
A. Extended IP access lists
B. Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF)
C. IP Source Guard
D. Context Based Access Control (CBAC)
IX. MPLS (New)
A. Label Switching Router (LSR)
B. Label Switched Path (LSP)
C. Route Descriptor
D. Label Format
E. Label imposition/disposition
F. Label Distribution
X. IPv6 (New)
A. IPv6 Addressing and types
B. IPv6 Neighbor Discovery
C. Basic IPv6 functionality protocols
D. IPv6 Multicast and related Multicast protocols
E. Tunneling Techniques
F. OSPFv3
G. EIGRPv6
Lab Equipment and IOS Version used for CCIE training.
· 7200 series routers with latest Advanced Enterprise Services IOS
· 3640 series routers - IOS 12.4 mainline – Advanced Enterprise Services
· 2600 series routers - IOS 12.3mainline – Advanced Enterprise Services
· Catalyst 3550 series switches running IOS version 12.2 – IP Services
· Catalyst 3560 Series switches running IOS version 12.2 - Advanced IP Services