TCP/IP Network Assignment
Need 8 ppt slides with at least 2 references.
Deadline: 24 hours
Your manager has tasked you to create two network diagrams that
illustrate the Remote Employee Connection options for VPN
connectivity. These diagrams will assist IT in setting up employees and
branch offices to remotely access the company’s intranet. You will use
these illustrations in your Week 2 Remote Employee Connection
presentation.
Remote WAN access for employees from home or on the road: The
remote employee must have access to the public Internet through an
Internet Service Provider (broadband cable or DSL), Cellular Service
Provider (smartphone, cellular adapter, or cellular hotspot), or other
service from a third-party provider (public or private Wi-Fi hotspot). The
company provides the VPN client software for users to install on their
mobile devices. With the VPN client, users log in using their company
credentials (user name and password) to a VPN server on the company
network. The company Active Directory controller authenticates the
user credentials. The VPN tunnel allows a remote user to securely
access the company’s intranet, services, and network resources over
the public Internet as if they were working from the premises.
Remote site-to-site WAN access for branch offices: The remote site has
a site-to-site VPN connection that lets branch office use the public
Internet as a conduit for accessing the main office’s intranet. This setup
eliminates the need for each computer to run VPN client software as if it
were on a remote-access VPN.
Create 2 Visio® diagrams illustrating the following scenarios.
• Remote WAN access for employees from home and on the road:
Create an end-to-end (from PC to VPN server) network
diagram showing firewalls, routers, switches, hosts and connections for
remote access from home or on the road to the main office VPN server
and intranet. Include a variety of Internet access endpoints, such as
broadband cable, DSL, cellular, and Wi-Fi hotspots.
• Remote site-to-site WAN access from a branch office: An end-to-end
(from PC to VPN server) network diagram showing firewalls, routers,
switches, hosts and connections for remote access from a branch office
site across a site-to-site VPN tunnel to the main office VPN server and
intranet. Include a variety of Internet access endpoints, such as T1
carrier, enterprise cellular, satellite, and cable broadband.
Copy and paste your network diagrams into Microsoft® PowerPoint
presentation slides.
Your manager has tasked you with creating a Remote Employee
Connection presentation for IT. This presentation will assist IT in setting
up remote (work-from-home) employees to access the company’s
intranet. These employees will use a VPN connection from their PC in
home to a remote VPN server located in the employee’s work campus.
Refer to the Visio tutorial and virtual desktop resource with Visio in
Week 1. You will also use the diagrams you created in Week 1,
incorporating the instructor feedback.
Create a 5- to 10-page Microsoft PowerPoint presentation using
Visio® including the following:
• WAN access options from the home to an ISP (Internet Service
Provider) from a variety of endpoints, including broadband cable, DSL,
cellular, and Wi-Fi hotspots
• Using Visio: Illustration of remote WAN access from home or on the
road from Week 1.
• WAN access options from a branch work campus to an ISP (assume
a different ISP with business/enterprise access such as T1 carrier,
enterprise cellular, satellite, and cable broadband)
• Using Visio: Illustration of remote site-to-site WAN access for branch
offices from Week 1.
• Major TCP/IP protocols with which the home PC is involved, from the
moment it boots up until its first IPv4 packet reaches the VPN server.
• Major routing protocols involved in building the forwarding tables in
an IPv4 network
• Using Visio: Illustration of how the first IPv4 is forwarded through the
network, showing:
• Source and destination IPv4 addresses
• Source and destination MAC addresses for the initial 2 hops in the
header of the packet
• Entries in the routers’ forwarding tables
• Major routing protocols involved in building the forwarding tables in
an IPv6 network
• Using Visio: Illustration of how the first IPv6 is forwarded through the
network, showing:
• Source and destination IPv6 addresses
• Source and destination MAC addresses for the initial 2 hops in the
header of the packet
• Entries in the routers’ forwarding tables
Note: It is recommended that Visio® be used to create network
diagrams for the presentation.
Copy and paste your network diagrams into Microsoft® PowerPoint
presentation. Do not submit Visio® files.