Sun Jun 04, 2006 6:50 pm
Generally speaking... NO
Start with reading (until you understand them) every single RFC you can find regarding IP, TCP, UDP, routing, RIP 1 & 2, OSPF, VRRP, BGP etc etc... and while reading, try to build and test it in real life....
The RFCs ARE the holy grail when it comes to IP based standards, no matter what someone tells you "we do industry standard so we are right" (read M$).... if they do not follow the RFCs you will get interoperability problems! You will still have problems even if they claim to follow the RFCs but if you understand them and now how to track/trace against the RFCs you will be able to hit your supplier over the head with real hard facts when they aren't doing things properly!
Then go ahead with basic, intermediate and expert courses in Cisco.. same here, build and test while reading. I'm not saying Cisco is the best thing since sliced bread but there's a lot of them out there so chances are you will run into them...
Then move onto something more obscure... MS RRAS and ISA! By now you should be fairly well versed in IP and routing and tunnels so this shouldn't be so hard... except for MS way of doing IPSEC which plainly sucks!
After that you should be able to tackle any route/IP/network problem out there... apart from some hardware related but that is a completely different issue
Basically... you need to understand the bits and bolts that builds up an IP packet, a RIP route packet, the route tables, DHCP configs etc etc before you can really USE anyones routers properly.
Lot's of people skip the basic understanding and then start raving about hardware/software that isn't working properly while the original problem lies in bad configuration due to "lack of knowledge" and/ or "will to learn"
If you want to focus on MTs then a very sweet way of simulating large, complex systems is to use vmware to install many routers in a single box... search this site for my posts on a topic labeled "policy-based routing" where I've shown a testbed I built with 6 MTs inside my normal PC!
Anyway, I'll step of the soap-box now
Best regards
/Jörgen