101communication LLC CertCities.com -- The Ultimate Site for Certified IT Professionals
   Certification Communities:  Home  Microsoft®  Cisco®  Oracle®  A+/Network+"  Linux/Unix  More  
    CertCities.com is proud to present our sponsor this month: Thomson Prometric
Editorial
Choose a Cert
News
Exam Reviews
Features
Columns
Salary Surveys
Free Newsletter
Cert on the Cheap
Resources
Forums
Practice Exams
Cert Basics
Links Library
Tips
Pop Quiz
Industry Releases
Windows Certs
Job Search
Conferences
Contributors
About Us
Search


Advanced Search
CertCities.com

CertCities.com
Let us know what you
think! E-mail us at:
.. Home .. Certifications .. Cisco .. Reviews ..Cisco Book Review Article Monday, August 18, 2003

TechMentor Conference & Expo PDF Brochure - Download It Now!

Save 30% on CertCities.com's Guide to IT Certification on the Cheap


Buy This Book!
Why "Internetworking with TCP/IP" should be on every network professional's bookshelf.

by Greg Neilson

9/26/2001 --
Book Review

CCDA

Title

Internetworking with TCP/IP, Volume 1, 4th edition

Authors Douglas E. Comer
Publisher Prentice Hall
Publication Date February 2000
ISBN 0-13-018380-6
Price $64.00 (U.S.)
Pros

Very clear and precise reference of TCP/IP protocols.

Cons It's not a cheap book (but it is worth the money).
Verdict Very highly recommended.
Let me start with a confession. I specifically asked to review "Internetworking with TCP/IP" because I really wanted the book! I already had the previous edition and it was time to upgrade to the latest version. If you haven’t come across this book before, you should definitely consider getting your own copy. Outside of the Windows resource kits, this is the book I find myself referring to most often.

The subtitle of the book is "Principles, Protocols, and Architectures," and that pretty well describes what you will find here. TCP/IP has become the lingua franca of networking, so if you have any involvement with networking you will need to be conversant with TCP/IP.

It is intended as both a technical reference and as an advanced level college textbook, so the book is serious in tone yet very clear and precise. The author has been involved with Internet-related research since the late '70s and is renowned as an expert on TCP/IP and the Internet.

The new edition updates a number of chapters with the latest developments in areas such as IPv6 and IPSec. It also includes four new chapters covering mobile IP, VPNs and NAT, HTML and HTTP, and voice and video over IP. The last edition was published in 1995, so there has been a great deal of RFC activity since then that needed to be added. Many of these newer technologies are also new features of Windows 2000. That makes this book a useful tutorial on the concepts involved before you delve deeper into Microsoft’s implementation when studying for your exams.

The book starts with a brief discussion of the underlying network technologies (Ethernet, FDDI and ATM), and then works its way up the TCP/IP protocol stack. Each main protocol, including IP, ICMP, UDP, TCP, Rlogin/Telnet and others, is covered in its own chapter. There is also plenty of discussion of routing concepts, with 4 chapters covering the design of routing protocols such as BGP, RIP, OSPF and Hello. To give an idea of the depth of coverage in the book, the DNS chapter includes a discussion of the hierarchical namespace, Internet domain naming, caching and how names are resolved to IP addresses. It then discusses the message formats from a DNS server, abbreviations of domain names, inverse mapping and the different types of resource records in DNS.

In short, I can’t recommend this book highly enough. It deserves a place on your professional reference bookshelf.

Have you read this book? Let us know what you think! Rate it below or enter our Forums.

 


Greg Neilson, MCSE+Internet, MCNE, PCLP, is a Contributing Editor for Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine and a manager at a large IT services firm in Australia. He's the author of Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell (O'Reilly and Associates, ISBN 1-56592-717-6). You can reach him at Attn: Greg.
More Cisco Book Reviews:

Post your comment below, or better yet, go to our Discussion Forums and really post your mind.

Current CertCities.com user rating for "Internetworking with TCP/IP" is 4 stars - very good
1/7/02 - tabo  wang says:
starstarstarstarstar
thisbook is excellent,but I can't read online.can you do some measure? thank you! my email:[email protected]
1/11/02 - Murali Sethuraman  from UAE says:
starstarstarstar
This is a very good reference book on TCP/IP protocols. My advice to the would be cisco & networking specialists is to read this book first (vol 1) and then start reading Cisco technical books. This is an excellent start for TCP/IP.
3/28/02 - David P  from Aus says:
starstarstarstarstar
Great book but I found it to be a little hard for a student starting out in Networking with no previous TCP/IP experience. Toward the later stages of the course it is very helpful to own this book. I suggest to anyone starting to learn TCP/IP to use the 3com White Paper: ‘Understanding IP Addressing: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know’ www.3com.com/other/pdfs/infra/corpinfo/en_US/501302.pdf
6/12/02 - Irfan  from Los Angeles says:
starstarstarstar
A quick question. Does this book get you prepared for the CCNA exams or some others?
11/13/02 - John Howard Oxley  from Atlanta says:
starstarstarstar
Comer obviously knows this stuff inside and out, and every once in a while you hit an "information air pocket" when reading -- you get everything up to a particular section or paragraph, and then the writing becomes dense, vague, or way "up there", somehow. But overall good for getting a grasp of how this protocol suite works.
6/16/03 - Anonymous says:
star
mo`money
Book Rating Key
5 stars - excellent excellent
4 stars - very good very good
3 stars - good good
2 stars - fair fair
1 star - poor poor
Name: (optional)
Location: (optional)
E-Mail: (optional)
Comments:
 
top

Sponsored Link:
Don’t let your IT Investment Go to Waste: Get Certified with Thomson Prometric!

Home | Microsoft | Cisco | Oracle | A+/Network+ | Linux/Unix | MOUS | List of Certs
Advertise | Certification Basics | Conferences | Contact Us | Contributors | Features | Forums | Links | News | Pop Quiz | Industry Releases | Reviews | Tips
Search | Site Map | MCPmag.com | TCPmag.com | OfficeCert.com | TechMentor Conferences | 101communications | Privacy Policy
This Web site is not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco Systems, Inc., Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp., The Computing Technology Industry Association, Linus Torvolds, or any other certification or technology vendor. Cisco® and Cisco Systems® are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. Microsoft, Windows and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. Oracle® is a registered trademark of Oracle Corp. A+®, i-Net+™, Network+™, and Server+™ are trademarks and registered trademarks of The Computing Technology Industry Association. (CompTIA). Linux™ is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other trademarks belong to their respective owners.
All content copyright 2000-03 101communications LLC, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
Reprints allowed with written permission from the publisher. For more information, e-mail