CCIE Data Center v3.0 Training
Overview

The Cisco CCIE Data Center (v3.0) Lab Exam is an eight-hour, hands-on exam that requires a candidate to plan, design, deploy, operate, and optimize complex Data Center networks.

$1499

Description

CCIE Data Center v3.0 Training

Welcome to our website, This site offers you the opportunity to learn more about New CCIE Data Center v3.0 and get your self prepared for Cisco exam. We are the reputed and trusted institute for CCIE Data Center v3.0 Real Lab Bootcamp and Training, Online and Offline (Classroom Training). The Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert (CCIE) certification is accepted worldwide as the most prestigious networking certification in the industry. Network Engineers holding an active Cisco CCIE certification are recognized for their expert network engineering skills and mastery of Cisco products and solutions. Iproute has established a reputation of leading the networking industry in deep technical networking knowledge and are deployed into the most technically challenging network assignments. Join us to Pass CCIE Data Center v3.0 Exam in One Shot and get your self recognized worldwide.

Pass New CCIE Data Center v3.0 Real Lab Exam

One of the most difficult requirement needed to achieve CCIE certification is to pass a grueling hands on lab examination administered by Cisco. The specific format of the CCIE Data Center v3.0 Real Lab is currently not the same across all tracks, but in general the entire time of the lab exam is 8 hours. The CCIE lab requires a candidate to configure and troubleshoot a series of complex networks to given specifications in this limited amount of time. Point values are given for each task. The CCIE lab exam is graded by trained proctors who ensure the entire criterion are met and points are awarded accordingly. The CCIE lab has traditionally only been available to take at a handful of Cisco lab locations worldwide, recently, there have been efforts made by Cisco to expand the availability of the lab in some tracks by introducing both a mobile lab which moves periodically to different cities around the world. We Ip route hold the ranking worldwide in making preparation of New CCIE Data Center v3.0 Real Lab Exam with guaranteed passing in one shot. 

Course Summary
CCIE Data Center v3.0 - Topics

The following topics are general guidelines for the content likely to be included on the exam. Your knowledge, skills and abilities on these topics will be tested throughout the entire network lifecycle, unless explicitly specified otherwise within this document.

  • 1.1 Layer 2 technologies
    • 1.1.a Link Aggregation
    • 1.1.a i vPC
    • 1.1.a ii PortChannel
    • 1.1.b Tagging/Trunking
    • 1.1.c Static Path binding
    • 1.1.d Spanning Tree Protocol
    • 1.1.d i PVST
    • 1.1.d ii MST
  • 1.2 Routing Protocols and features
    • 1.2.a OSPF (v2 and v3)
    • 1.2.a i Authentication
    • 1.2.a ii Adjacencies
    • 1.2.a iii Network types and Area Types
    • 1.2.a iv LSA Types
    • 1.2.a v Route Aggregation/Summarization
    • 1.2.a vi Route Redistribution
    • 1.2.b ISIS
    • 1.2.b i Adjacencies
    • 1.2.b.i.1. Single area, single topology
    • 1.2.b ii Network types, Levels and Router types
    • 1.2.b.ii.1. NSAP addressing
    • 1.2.b.ii.2. Point-to-point, broadcast
    • 1.2.c BGP
    • 1.2.c i Path Selection
    • 1.2.c ii External and Internal Peering
    • 1.2.c iii Route reflectors and Route Server
    • 1.2.c iv Peer Templates
    • 1.2.c v Multi-Hop EBGP
    • 1.2.c vi Route Aggregation/Summarization
    • 1.2.c vii Route Redistribution
    • 1.2.d BFD
    • 1.2.e FHRP
  • 1.3 Multicast protocols
    • 1.3.a PIM
    • 1.3.a i Sparse Mode
    • 1.3.a ii BiDir
    • 1.3.a iii Static RP, BSR, AutoRP, PhantomRP
    • 1.3.a iv IPv4 PIM Anycast
    • 1.3.a v IPv4 Anycast RP using MSDP
    • 1.3.b IGMP
    • 1.3.b i IGMPv2, IGMPv3
    • 1.3.b ii IGMP Snooping
    • 1.3.b iii IGMP Querier
  • 2.1 Physical fabric components
    • 2.1.a Fabric Discovery
    • 2.1.b Controllers/Network Managers
    • 2.1.c Switches
  • 2.2 Fabric policies
    • 2.2.a Access Policies
    • 2.2.b Multi Tenancy
    • 2.2.c Monitoring Policies
  • 2.3 Tenant Policies
    • 2.3.a Application profiles and EPGs
    • 2.3.b Networking
    • 2.3.c Security
  • 2.4 Fabric Monitoring
    • 2.4.a Faults
    • 2.4.b Events
    • 2.4.c Health indicators
    • 2.4.d Audit Logs
  • 2.5 Virtual Networking
    • 2.5.a vSphere VDS
  • 3.1 VRF lite
  • 3.2 L3Out
    • 3.2.a OSPF
    • 3.2.a i Authentication
    • 3.2.a ii Adjacencies
    • 3.2.a iii Network types and Area Types
    • 3.2.a iv Route Redistribution
    • 3.2.b BGP
    • 3.2.b i AS manipulation
    • 3.2.b ii External and Internal Peering
    • 3.2.b iii Route reflectors
    • 3.2.b iv Route Redistribution
    • 3.2.c Transit Routing
  • 3.3 Inter Fabric connectivity
    • 3.3.a Multi-Pod
    • 3.3.b Multi-Site
    • 3.3.c Virtual POD
    • 3.3.d remote Leaf
  • 3.4 Overlays
    • 3.4.a VXLAN EVPN
  • 4.1 Compute Resources
    • 4.1.a UCSM Policies, Profiles and Templates
    • 4.1.b Hyperflex
  • 4.2 Compute Connectivity
    • 4.2.a SAN/LAN uplinks
    • 4.2.b Rack server integration
    • 4.2.c Port Modes
  • 5.1 FC and FCoE
    • 5.1.a Zoning
    • 5.1.b NPV/NPIV
    • 5.1.c Trunking
    • 5.1.d Portchannel
    • 5.1.e Load Balancing
  • 5.2 iSCSI
    • 5.2.a Authentication
    • 5.2.b Multipathing
  • 5.3 RoCE v2 over IP Networks
  • 6.1 Security features
    • 6.1.a ACL’s
    • 6.1.b First Hop Security
    • 6.1.c Port security
    • 6.1.d Private VLANs
    • 6.1.e Contracts
  • 6.2 RBAC
    • 6.2.a Radius
    • 6.2.b TACACS+
    • 6.2.c LDAP
    • 6.2.d AAA
  • 6.3 Network Services Insertion and Redirection
    • 6.3.a Policy Based Routing
    • 6.3.b Policy Based Redirection
    • 6.3.c Inter VRF communication
    • 6.3.d Route Targets
    • 6.3.e Prefix Lists
  • 6.4 Services
    • 6.4.a Flow/Telemetry Export
    • 6.4.b SPAN
    • 6.4.c SNMP
    • 6.4.d Syslog
    • 6.4.e DHCP
    • 6.4.f NTP/PTP
  • 6.5 Traffic management
    • 6.5.a Queueing
    • 6.5.b Policing
    • 6.5.c Classification/Marking
    • 6.5.d Scheduling
    • 6.5.e CoPP
  • 7.1 Data center tasks using scripts (Python and Ansible)
    • 7.1.a Create, Read, Update, Delete using RESTful APIs
    • 7.1.b Deploy and modify configurations
    • 7.1.c Statistics, Data Collection
  • 7.2 Data Center Automation and Orchestration using tools
    • 7.2.a DCNM
    • 7.2.b UCSD
    • 7.2.b i Tasks
    • 7.2.b ii Workflows
    • 7.2.b iii Catalog
    • 7.2.c Intersight
    • 7.2.d CloudCenter Suite
    • 7.2.d i Applications
    • 7.2.d ii Deployments
    • 7.2.d iii Action Orchest
Schedule & Pricing

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Frequently Asked Questions
  • Introduction
  • A (Very) Basic Introduction to Networking
  • The OSI Reference Model Overview
  • The TCP/IP Stack
  • The Upper OSI Layers
  • The Lower OSI Layers
  • Introduction
  • The Transport Layer Header, TCP and UDP
  • Introduction
  • Class A IP Addresses
  • IP Address Classes B and C
  • IP Address Classes D and E
  • Introduction
  • Local Area Network Layer 2 – Ethernet
  • Introduction
  • Switches vs Hubs
  • Switch Operation
    Routers
  • Other Cisco Devices
  • Cisco Device Functions – Lab Exercises
  • Introduction
  • A (Very) Basic Introduction to Networking
  • The OSI Reference Model Overview
  • The TCP/IP Stack
  • The Upper OSI Layers
  • The Lower OSI Layers
  • Introduction
  • The Transport Layer Header, TCP and UDP
  • Introduction
  • Class A IP Addresses
  • IP Address Classes B and C
  • IP Address Classes D and E
  • Introduction
  • Local Area Network Layer 2 – Ethernet
  • Introduction
  • Switches vs Hubs
  • Switch Operation
    Routers
  • Other Cisco Devices
  • Cisco Device Functions – Lab Exercises
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