CCIE Practical Studies, Volume II

Reviewer Name: Sam Chang, Senior Network Specialist

Reviewer Certifications: CCNP and Wireless LAN certification

Karl Solie and Leah Lynch’s CCIE Practical Studies, Volume II is a valuable addition to the CCIE candidate’s arsenal of study materials, and provides new perspective on foundational topics, while diving deeper into more obscure areas. This second volume allows the authors to move beyond the core suite of CCIE required knowledge (e.g., Frame Relay, IGP’s, PPP) in order to explore in practical ways the other key study areas. The book covers six major categories:

  • Advanced Ethernet Switching with the Catalyst 3550
  • Route Maps & Policy Based Routing
  • Multicast Routing
  • Router Performance Management - ATM, Switching Modes, Compression
  • QoS - Intserv, Diffserv, Rate Limiting, Queuing
  • BGP-4

The book offers insight for all reader experience levels -- from those in the early stages of CCIE lab preparation to the advanced readers who are fine-tuning their lab skills. At either end of the spectrum, this book serves as a complimentary volume and should be read along with the other suite of CCIE absolute “must reads” (e.g., Doyle’s Routing TCP/IP, Vols.1,2, Halabi’s Internet Routing Architectures). Solie and Lynch’s second volume’s value is how it offers just enough theory to keep the novice going, but not so much as to overly repeat what has already been extensively written about. This same concept of minimal overlap extends past the theory and into the content and practice labs. Even though much of what is explored has been covered in other books, Solie and Lynch frame the material in a different way and offer numerous, helpful examples. In addition, each major category spends at least some time exploring concepts that have not historically been well documented. An example of this is how the authors provide real examples of how and when to use the ORIGIN attribute to filter BGP routes. Where previously other authors only provided conceptual details of the ORIGIN attribute, Solie and Lynch give practical examples of how it actually works and how you can manipulate BGP routing with it. In addition to exploring unfamiliar concepts, the strength of the book is in how the authors explain concepts in a simple manner and reinforce those ideas with easy to understand illustrations and multiple hands-on lab examples (assuming you have equipment to use). The book ends with five CCIE mock labs, with a companion CD-ROM that has the configs and solutions for the lab, as well as terminal emulation software. Strangely enough, considering that the book spends so much time covering QoS and BGP especially, the five CCIE labs do not really push the technical difficulty limits for these categories.

There are only a few drawbacks to this book. The chapter on the Catalyst 3550 could have benefited by cutting out the spanning-tree and trunking theory (much of which was simply duplicated from the first volume), and spending more time on other practical examples of advanced configuration (e.g. 802.1X, IP phone port configuration). Each chapter afterwards, however, seemed to get better than the previous. One minor point of frustration is the periodic errors found in the diagrams provided (e.g. wrong IP addresses, etc.). A few diagrams in the BGP section are not legible due to printing errors, but an errata was released to correct that problem and can be found online at ciscopress.com. For the most part, however, these drawbacks are only minor compared to the value of the overall book. Lastly, although not necessarily a fault in itself, as a compilation of various technologies, the book is not capable of going into fine detail in each of its categories and leaves the reader wanting for more examples and labs. Hence the reason this book must be considered a complimentary piece to the overall CCIE’s library and not just a standalone work (not that there really is one). People looking for a single book to prepare them for the CCIE lab exam will be disappointed with this book, as they will with any other book.

CCIE Practical Studies, Volume II is an excellent resource for CCIE lab candidates. Additionally, it is a helpful resource to network professionals in general as it provides valuable and “real world” applicable knowledge of routing and switching.