Lecture #26 - Revision

What's Been Covered?

Throughout the semester we have covered topics which primarily relate to IP routing, although we have also looked at some advanced networking topics. In summary we have covered the following areas:

About the Exam

The exam is currently scheduled for the 22nd June 2009 at 9am and is to be held at the Osborne Hall - please confirm the exam time and venue with the examination timetable closer to the date. The exam is worth 60% of your overall mark in this subject.

The exam consists of six (6) equally weighted questions, all of which add up to 120 marks - you should attempt all of them! The question topics are as follows:

  1. Routing Basics - network topology, IP addressing, subnetting, routing principles, router configuration, etc.
  2. Interior Routing (RIP) - RIPv1/RIPv2, distance vector routing, authentication, RIP configuration, multicast addressing, etc.
  3. Interior Routing (OSPF) - OSPFv2, link state routing, OSPF concepts/design, Dijkstra's SPF algorithm, route redistribution, etc.
  4. Exterior Routing - BGPv4, path vector routing, BGP configuration, route summarisation, etc
  5. Traffic Engineering - Internet traffic characteristics, QoS, congestion control, VLAN, MPLS, VPN, multicasting, etc.
  6. Cisco Access Controls - access lists, distribution lists, packet filtering, etc.

You will be asked to provide example configuration entries and/or changes, as you would issue at an IOS prompt. A summarised list of the more useful Cisco IOS commands provided as an appendix to the exam.

What's not on the Exam!

There are a number of topics that are not examinable and are therefore not on the exam. These include:

Pretty much everything else that has been covered in lectures is examinable and is or maybe included on the examination.

Studying for the Exam

Studying for the exam should be fairly straight forward:

Where to From Here?

If you're seriously interested in pursuing a career as a network engineering, network administrator or in the internetworking field, you might like consider doing some of the following: