Re: [j-nsp] JunOS cookbook thoughts?

2007-07-28 Thread Gordon Ewasiuk

On Jul 28, 2007, at 1:09 AM, Jonathan Brashear wrote:

 I'm considering picking up O'Reilly's 'JunOS Cookbook', but figured  
 this
 is as good a place as any to ask for reviews. :)  Has anyone bought  
 this
 and used it?

YES!

It's an operational, hands-on guide to JunOS.  Strongly recommend.   
Especially for those who are coming from the C vendor.  Published  
in April 2006 so it is relatively current.

Chapter Index:

Router Configuration and File Management
Basic Router Security and Access Control
IPSec
SNMP
Logging
NTP
Router Interfaces
IP Routing
Routing Policy and Firewall Filters
RIP
IS-IS
OSPF
BGP
MPLS
VPNs
IP Multicast

It's a no-nonsense guide too.  Assumes a level of expertise regarding  
protocols and standards.  You don't get chapters and chapters of  
theory and background.  Just lots of practical, hands-on JunOS  
commands and recipes.  Best book I've purchased this year.

-Gordon


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Re: [j-nsp] VRRP Tracking options

2007-07-28 Thread Youssef Yosry
I forgot to tell you that I am using J series routers, which Ethernet OAM is
not supported. Also I want to track the reachability of an interface status
located in another router which I can reach through an ISP network; it is
directly connected to the first one. 

 

 

Best Regards,

 

Youssef Yosry

System Engineer, Core Switching Products

 

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Re: [j-nsp] JunOS cookbook thoughts?

2007-07-28 Thread Stephen Fulton
Gordon Ewasiuk wrote:

 It's a no-nonsense guide too.  Assumes a level of expertise regarding  
 protocols and standards.  You don't get chapters and chapters of  
 theory and background.  Just lots of practical, hands-on JunOS  
 commands and recipes.  Best book I've purchased this year.

I concur, it's well worth it.  The only part I've really missed is info 
on certain L2 functions of JunOS, but that's easily found on the Juniper 
site.

-- Stephen.

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Re: [j-nsp] JunOS cookbook thoughts?

2007-07-28 Thread christian
Definitely worth it, I constantly use the book as well as 2 other resources

http://www.juniperforum.com/
and this wiki i recently found which has the potential to be an excelent
Juniper resource
 http://juniper.cluepon.net/index.php/Main_Page


On 7/28/07, Stephen Fulton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Gordon Ewasiuk wrote:

  It's a no-nonsense guide too.  Assumes a level of expertise regarding
  protocols and standards.  You don't get chapters and chapters of
  theory and background.  Just lots of practical, hands-on JunOS
  commands and recipes.  Best book I've purchased this year.

 I concur, it's well worth it.  The only part I've really missed is info
 on certain L2 functions of JunOS, but that's easily found on the Juniper
 site.

 -- Stephen.

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Re: [j-nsp] JunOS cookbook thoughts?

2007-07-28 Thread David Ball
   I would say that it's a good primer for people new to Juniper, but
is not a substitute (nor is it intended to be) for the online docs, as
someone mentioned earlier in this thread.  It is pretty high level,
but gets your mind in the right 'space' prior to getting heavily into
configuring Juniper routers.

David


On 7/28/07, christian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Definitely worth it, I constantly use the book as well as 2 other resources

 http://www.juniperforum.com/
 and this wiki i recently found which has the potential to be an excelent
 Juniper resource
  http://juniper.cluepon.net/index.php/Main_Page


 On 7/28/07, Stephen Fulton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Gordon Ewasiuk wrote:
 
   It's a no-nonsense guide too.  Assumes a level of expertise regarding
   protocols and standards.  You don't get chapters and chapters of
   theory and background.  Just lots of practical, hands-on JunOS
   commands and recipes.  Best book I've purchased this year.
 
  I concur, it's well worth it.  The only part I've really missed is info
  on certain L2 functions of JunOS, but that's easily found on the Juniper
  site.
 
  -- Stephen.
 
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