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CCNA 2 v3.1 Module 10 Intermediate TCP /IP

CCNA 2 v3.1 Module 10 Intermediate TCP /IP. Purpose of This PowerPoint. This PowerPoint primarily consists of the Target Indicators (TIs) of this module in CCNA version 3.1. It was created to give instructors a PowerPoint to take and modify as their own. This PowerPoint is:

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CCNA 2 v3.1 Module 10 Intermediate TCP /IP

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  1. CCNA 2 v3.1 Module 10Intermediate TCP/IP

  2. Purpose of This PowerPoint • This PowerPoint primarily consists of the Target Indicators (TIs) of this module in CCNA version 3.1. • It was created to give instructors a PowerPoint to take and modify as their own. • This PowerPoint is: • NOT a study guide for the module final assessment. • NOT a study guide for the CCNA certification exam. • Please report any mistakes you find in this PowerPoint by using the Academy Connection Help link.

  3. To Locate Instructional Resource Materials on Academy Connection: • Go to the Community FTP Center to locate materials created by the instructor community • Go to the Tools section • Go to the Alpha Preview section • Go to the Community link under Resources • See the resources available on the Class home page for classes you are offering • Search http://www.cisco.com • Contact your parent academy!

  4. Objectives

  5. TCP Operation The transport layer is responsible for the reliable transport of and regulation of data flow from source to destination.

  6. Synchronization or Three-Way Handshake

  7. Denial-of-Service Attacks

  8. Simple Windowing

  9. TCP Sequence and Acknowledgment Numbers

  10. Positive ACK • Acknowledgement is a common step in the synchronization process which includes sliding windows and data sequencing.

  11. Protocol Graph: TCP/IP

  12. UDP Segment Format

  13. Port Numbers

  14. Telnet Port Numbers

  15. Reserved TCP and UDP Port Numbers

  16. Ports for Clients • Whenever a client connects to a service on a server, a source and destination port must be specified. • TCP and UDP segments contain fields for source and destination ports.

  17. Port Numbering and Well-Known Port Numbers • Port numbers are divided into three different categories: • well-known ports • registered ports • dynamic or private ports

  18. Port Numbers and Socket

  19. Comparison of MAC addresses, IP addresses, and port numbers • A good analogy can be made with a normal letter. • The name on the envelope would be equivalent to a port number, the street address is the MAC, and the city and state is the IP address.

  20. Summary

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