Routing IPv4 and IPv6 for Cisco CCNA 200-125/100-105
Pluralsight
Course Summary
Understanding how data moves across networks with IPv4 and IPv6 is the cornerstone of CCNA studies. This course explains in detail how IPv4 and IPv6 routing operates with extensive demonstrations to explain how routers move IP packets.
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Course Description
The entire purpose of a router is to move packets from one interface to another. This course will explain in detail how IPv4 and IPv6 routing works. You will start by learning how ARP operates, allowing IPv4 packets to be sent in an Ethernet frame. Next, you will examine how you can get IP packets off of a network by using the default gateway configuration on a PC, and then take a look at what happens after the router receives the packet, and uses a route to forward the message. This course will describe how to specify and configure static routes for both IPv4 and IPv6. Throughout the course, you will look at troubleshooting tools, how to use them to effectively troubleshoot a network, and wrap up the course by looking at how you can set up a redundant IPv4 network using static routes.
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Course Syllabus
Course Overview- 1m 29s
—Course Overview 1m 29sAddress Resolution Protocol- 28m 28s
—Introduction 1m 18s
—A Basic Network and the IP Packet 6m 1s
—How Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) Works 6m 1s
—Demo: Examining the ARP Table on a Windows Workstation 3m 41s
—Demo: Using Wireshark to Capture an ARP Message 10m 17s
—Summary 1m 8sThe Default Gateway- 25m 25sIPv4 Static Routing- 30m 45sTroubleshooting IPv4 Static Routes- 34m 5sIPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol- 30m 39sIPv6 Static Routing- 19m 48sTroubleshooting IPv6 Static Routing- 20m 3sCheck Your Knowledge: Route Selection and Dual Stack- 48m 27sCheck Your Knowledge: Static Routes in Redundant Networks- 46m 28s