my lab attempt in 2001(when it was 2 day thing and you cabled the network yourself, also still had ISDN..later token ring switches and you were not allowed to touch any hardware... I think Appletalk and IPX was still on the lab then) only said no static routes were permitted unless there was a specific use case in your lab question. Do not remember anything about no tunnels allowed
This was excellent. I am a semi guy jumping straight into Network as a Service, which will integrate the old and the new technologies available. I started with your video. It was well Done. I’m wondering where you are seen now?? I could use you in some really powerful way as we sell this brand new service saving 65% cost from standard SDWAN.
In meraki SD WAN control plan is on edge devices or it is separated? And if it is separated then how is the traffic flow? Every packet goes to cloud? How is it ?
How does the SD-WAN IP-SEC tunnels overcome the notorious issues with VoIP? Although I've never had to worked in an environment which sends VoIP over IPSEC Tunnels I've always understood there to be issues and a LOT of troubleshooting with the pair? I understand the QoS process of prioritising certain packets and having application aware protocols in place however the whole encryption process is going to slow the RT traffic down, or is this not as much of a concern these days because processors are quicker and more powerful?
The biggest issues with IPsec tunnels and VOIP (in my experience) tend to be around asymmetric routing via multiple paths, which results in one-way audio if encountered. There should be nothing strictly prohibitive about sending VOIP packets via IPsec other than potentially QoS as the traffic propagates across the Internet. But I've worked with dozens of organizations sending VOIP across IPsec without any issue.
Hi KS,its a awesome videos.Have been watching ENCOR and SD_WAN video.Could you assist me to provide some insight and input that i would like to know how to migrate from MPLS to 100% internet SD_WAN deployment..I would like to know migration methodology approach and so on.Thanks
We're wrapping up SD-WAN tomorrow on this channel, but a full SD-WAN course is set to release on CBT Nuggets very soon. Stay tuned for that announcement! You can follow me on Twitter (@KishSquared) if you want to be sure you don't miss when it goes live :)
You are a great teacher . so clear and simple when you explain them
That kind of content is just fantastic !
Great job Jeff! Thx for your time . I'm looking forward to viewing your other material!
Finally got a chance to watch this one! Thanks for the great content Jeff!
Hi Jeff,
your cbtnuggets content is amazing. Waiting for more.
Great lesson Jeff. Thank you
Thanks for the training, I really enjoyed it.
13:58 it used to be static routes that were banned on the CCIE Lab.
It's both! At least when I took it back in the day 😁
my lab attempt in 2001(when it was 2 day thing and you cabled the network yourself, also still had ISDN..later token ring switches and you were not allowed to touch any hardware... I think Appletalk and IPX was still on the lab then) only said no static routes were permitted unless there was a specific use case in your lab question. Do not remember anything about no tunnels allowed
Excellent explanation
This was excellent. I am a semi guy jumping straight into Network as a Service, which will integrate the old and the new technologies available. I started with your video. It was well Done. I’m wondering where you are seen now?? I could use you in some really powerful way as we sell this brand new service saving 65% cost from standard SDWAN.
That was a really great summary! Thanks so much!
Is there a video you addressing the "WHAT IT IS" rather than "why" first ?
6-tuple are:
sr-dst-IP
src-dst-port
QoS ( ToS or DSCP fileds)
Transport Layer Protocol used in the communication, such as TCP,UDP, ICMP
am i right?
cool but in some point i get lost !!! thanks Jiff
In meraki SD WAN control plan is on edge devices or it is separated? And if it is separated then how is the traffic flow? Every packet goes to cloud? How is it ?
How does the SD-WAN IP-SEC tunnels overcome the notorious issues with VoIP? Although I've never had to worked in an environment which sends VoIP over IPSEC Tunnels I've always understood there to be issues and a LOT of troubleshooting with the pair? I understand the QoS process of prioritising certain packets and having application aware protocols in place however the whole encryption process is going to slow the RT traffic down, or is this not as much of a concern these days because processors are quicker and more powerful?
The biggest issues with IPsec tunnels and VOIP (in my experience) tend to be around asymmetric routing via multiple paths, which results in one-way audio if encountered. There should be nothing strictly prohibitive about sending VOIP packets via IPsec other than potentially QoS as the traffic propagates across the Internet. But I've worked with dozens of organizations sending VOIP across IPsec without any issue.
Excellent
Hi KS,its a awesome videos.Have been watching ENCOR and SD_WAN video.Could you assist me to provide some insight and input that i would like to know how to migrate from MPLS to 100% internet SD_WAN deployment..I would like to know migration methodology approach and so on.Thanks
Hi Jeff,
When is the next ENCOR study group starting?
They are unfortunately on hold right now. I hope to start them back up one day though!
Hi Kish! Is the ENCOR study group still going on?
It is! We meet every two weeks, with tomorrow (9/23) being our next session!
You're awesome
i'm enjoying megaman's helmet XD
Please let me know where I can get all Sd- WAN related videos. I need full training material for SD-WAN
We're wrapping up SD-WAN tomorrow on this channel, but a full SD-WAN course is set to release on CBT Nuggets very soon. Stay tuned for that announcement! You can follow me on Twitter (@KishSquared) if you want to be sure you don't miss when it goes live :)
Thanks!!