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Network Monitoring and Analysis Ed Wilson

Network Monitoring and Analysis By Ed Wilson

Network Monitoring and Analysis by Ed Wilson


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Network Monitoring and Analysis Summary

Network Monitoring and Analysis: A Protocol Approach to Troubleshooting by Ed Wilson

Ever wonder what in the world is happening under the hood of your network? Why things suddenly slow down, print jobs fail? Network monitoring is the least understood aspect of network administration -- and one of the most important. In this book, a leading networking expert shows you exactly how to monitor and analyze your Windows-based network -- and how to use the information to maximize performance, reduce congestion, plan for growth -- even identify intrusions! Start by reviewing the TCP/IP, IPX/SPX, Ethernet, and Samba protocol basics you need in order to monitor and analyze networks effectively. Inspect network traffic from four different perspectives: client traffic, server traffic, application traffic, and service traffic. Next, learn how to use each version of Microsoft's Network Monitor (Netmon) -- and compare commercial network monitoring tools, discovering when to use each. Finally, review four of the most important networking troubleshooting scenarios, in-depth: connectivity problems, faulty applications, hardware problems, and compromised security -- walking through the process of identifying, analyzing, and solving the problem, step-by-step. For all network and Windows system administrators seeking to improve the performance of their networks.

About Ed Wilson

ED WILSON (MCSE, MCT, Master ASE, CCNA) is a Senior Networking Specialist with Full Service Networking, a Microsoft Solution Provider Partner in Cincinnati, OH. He is the co-author of several networking books.

Table of Contents

I. PROTOCOL ANALYSIS: A LOOK AT THE PLAYERS.

1. Basic Network Models.

The OSI Model.Application Layer. Presentation Layer. Session Layer. Transport Layer. Network Layer. Data Link Layer. Physical Layer. The IEEE 802 Project. Enhancements Made to the OSI Model. Logical Link Control Layer (LLC). Media Access Control Layer (MAC). A Look at How Data Makes it Onto the Wire. The Packet Creation Process. Ethernet Communication Specifics. What Is the Role of Protocols in All This? Protocol Stack. A Layered Approach. So How Do I Tie All This Together? Application Protocols. Transport Protocols. Network Protocols. Connection-Oriented Network Service. Connectionless Network Service. Data Link Layer Addresses. Network Layer Addresses. Data Encapsulation. IP over LAN Technologies. Flow Control. Internetworking Functions of the OSI Network Layer. WAN Services. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

2. The TCP/IP Protocol Suite.

Transmission Control Protocol. A Look at the TCP Header. A Look at the Three-Way Handshake. The TCP Quiet Time Concept. Half-Open Connections and Other Anomalies. Reset Generation. Reset Processing. Scenario 1: Local User Initiates the Close. Scenario 2: TCP Receives a FIN from the Network. Scenario 3: Both Users Close Simultaneously. The Communication of Urgent Information. Managing the Window. User/TCP Interface. TCP User Commands. Send. Receive. Close. Status Abort. TCP/Lower-Level Interface. Events That Occur: User Calls. LISTEN STATE. SEND Call. Internet Protocol. The IP Header. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

3. The SPX/IPX Protocol.

SPX Protocol. SPX Header. IPX Protocol. Connectionless Protocol. Operates at the OSI Network Layer. Packet Structure. IPX Addressing. Network Number. Reserved Network Numbers. Internal Network Number. Node Number. Socket Number. How IPX Routing Works. Session and Datagram Interfaces. Message Header Structures. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

4. Server Message Blocks.

SMB Operation Overview. Server Name Determination. Server Name Resolution. Message Transport. Sample Message Flow. Dialect Negotiation. Connection Establishment. Backwards Compatibility. Session Setup. Connection Management. SMB Signing. Opportunistic Locks. Exclusive Oplocks. Batch Oplocks. Level II Oplocks. Security Model. Resource Share/Access Example. Authentication. Distributed File System (DFS) Support. SMB Header. TID Field. UID Field. PID Field. MID Field. Flags field. Flags2 Field. Status Field. Timeouts. Data Buffer (BUFFER) and String Formats. Access Mode Encoding. Open Function Encoding. Open Action Encoding. File Attribute Encoding. Extended File Attribute Encoding. Batching Requests (AndX Messages). Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

II. NETWORK TRAFFIC ANALYSIS AND OPTIMIZATION: A LOOK AT THE ISSUES

5. A LOOK AT CLIENT TRAFFIC.

CLIENT INITIALIZATION DHCP traffic. WINS Client Traffic. Name Registration and Renewal. Logon Traffic. Finding a Logon Server. Netlogon Optimization. Browsing. Browser Host Announcements. Where Are the Backup Browsers? Browser Traffic Optimization. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

6. A Look at Server Traffic.

DNS Resolving an Address. Recursive Look-ups. Integration with WINS. DNS Optimization. BDC Initialization. Where Is the PDC? Updates to the Database. Optimizing Account Sync Traffic. NetLogon Service. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

7. A Look at Application Traffic

File and Print WINS Request 194Broadcast. ARP. Three-Way Handshake. NetBIOS Session. SMB Dialect Negotiation. Internet Browsing. Web Pages. Secure Sockets. Optimizing Intranet Browser Traffic. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

8. Exchange and Internet Mail.

Exchange Opening and Closing the Session. Exchange Server in Action. POP3 Protocol. Exchange Server to Server. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

III. COMMON NETWORK MONITORS: A LOOK AT THE TOOLS.

9. Microsoft's Network Monitor Family.

Network Monitor Making the Capture. Manually Capturing Traffic. Viewing the Capture. Saving the Capture. Filtering the Capture. Analyzing the Capture. Network Monitor Security. Password Protection. Network Monitor Installations: Detecting Others. Systems Management Server. Network Monitor. Additional Features. Connecting to Remote Agents. The Wizards. Configuring Triggers. Network Monitor 2.0. The Cool New Features. Things That Don't Work. Additional Security Features. Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

IV. TROUBLESHOOTING SCENARIOS: A LOOK AT COMMON PROBLEMS.

10. Troubleshooting Issues Workstation Cannot Logon Can We Ping the Server?

Workstation Cannot Logon Can We Ping the Server? Now We Have a Case for a Laptop! Workstation Cannot Obtain DHCP Lease. Look at the Conversation. Analyze What Is Missing. Workstation Is Slow. Can You Define Slow? What Is the Source of Your Discontent? Logon Problems. I Am Trying to Authenticate, but Where? Strange Event Log Errors. A Method for Looking at Server Problems. Running Unattended. Excessive Broadcasts. Who Is Doing It? Why Are They Doing It? Chapter Review. In the Next Chapter.

11. Security Issues

Rogue DHCP Servers.Have I Got an Address for You? Well, Where Are You? Unauthorized Sniffing. First, You Have to Find Them. Then You Give Their Sniffer a Sinus Problem! Chapter Review.

Appendix A: A List of Well-Known TCP and UDP Port Numbers
Appendix B: Command Line Utilities
Appendix C: Common NCPs
Appendix D: Troubleshooting Common Network Errors.

Runt/Long Frames. CRC or FCS Errors. Collisions. Late Collisions.

Appendix E: NetBIOS Suffixes.
Appendix F: Domain Controller Startup.
Appendix G: Opening a Web Page.
Glossary.
Index.

Additional information

GOR002482548
9780130264954
0130264954
Network Monitoring and Analysis: A Protocol Approach to Troubleshooting by Ed Wilson
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Pearson Education (US)
20000113
384
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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