IP address management : principles and practice
著者
書誌事項
IP address management : principles and practice
(IEEE series on network management / Salah Aidarous and Thomas Plevyak, series editors)
IEEE Press/Wiley, c2011
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book will be the first covering the subject of IP address management (IPAM). The practice of IPAM includes the application of network management disciplines to IP address space and associated network services, namely DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) and DNS (Domain Name System). The consequence of inaccurately configuring DHCP is that end users may not be able to obtain IP addresses to access the network. Without proper DNS configuration, usability of the network will greatly suffer as the name-to-address lookup process may fail. Imagine having to navigate to a website or send an email or an instant message by IP address instead of by name! It's equally important that these DHCP and DNS configurations be based on a common IP address plan, which maps out the IP address hierarchy, subnets, address pools, and domains. IPAM applies management disciplines to these core services, including configuration, change control, auditing, reporting and so on, and they are necessary given the absolute requirement for properly managing IP space and DHCP and DNS servers. The linkages among an IP address plan, DHCP server configuration and DNS server configuration are inseparable; a change of an IP address will affect DNS information and perhaps DHCP as well. These functions provide the foundation for today's converged services IP networks, so they need to be managed using a rigorous approach.
Today, there is no single book that covers the management of these linkages and services they provide; IP Address Management Principles and Practice will fill that gap. While several books are available for leading vendors' DHCP and DNS services implementations, few exist for IP address planning, and none exist that unifies these three topics.
To obtain a free copy of the IPAM Configuration Guide please send an email to:
ieeeproposals@wiley.com
目次
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Part I IP Addressing
1 The Internet Protocol 3
1.1 Highlights of Internet Protocol History 3
1.2 IP Addressing 7
1.3 Classless Addressing 13
1.4 Special Use Addresses 14
2 Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) 15
2.1 Introduction 15
2.2 IPv6 Address Allocations 21
2.3 IPv6 Address Autoconfiguration 30
2.4 Neighbor Discovery 30
2.5 Reserved Subnet Anycast Addresses 33
2.6 Required Host IPv6 Addresses 34
3 IP Address Allocation 35
3.1 Address Allocation Logic 38
3.2 IPv6 Address Allocation 49
3.3 IPAM Worldwide's IPv6 Allocations 53
3.4 Internet Registries 57
3.5 Multihoming and IP Address Space 62
3.6 Block Allocation and IP Address Management 63
Part II DHCP
4 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) 67
4.1 Introduction 67
4.2 DHCP Overview 68
4.3 DHCP Servers and Address Assignmen 75
4.4 DHCP Options 78
4.5 Other Means of Dynamic Address Assignment 89
5 DHCP for IPv6 (DHCPv6) 90
5.1 DHCP Comparison: IPv4 Versus IPv6 91
5.2 DHCPv6 Address Assignment 92
5.3 DHCPv6 Prefix Delegation 93
5.4 DHCPv6 Support of Address Autoconfiguration 94
5.5 Device Unique Identifiers 97
5.6 Identity Associations 99
5.7 DHCPv6 Options 99
6 DHCP Applications 109
6.1 Multimedia Device Type Specific Configuration 110
6.2 Broadband Subscriber Provisioning 111
6.3 Related Lease Assignment or Limitation Applications 115
6.4 Preboot Execution Environment Clients 115
7 DHCP Server Deployment Strategies 118
7.1 DHCP Server Platforms 118
7.2 Centralized DHCP Server Deployment 119
7.3 Distributed DHCP Server Deployment 120
7.4 Server Deployment Design Considerations 122
7.5 DHCP Deployment on Edge Devices 125
8 DHCP and Network Access Security 127
8.1 Network Access Control 127
8.2 Alternative Access Control Approaches 132
8.3 Securing DHCP 137
Part III DNS
9 The Domain Name System (DNS) Protocol 143
9.1 DNS Overview-Domains and Resolution 143
9.2 Name Resolution 145
9.3 Zones and Domains 148
9.4 Resolver Configuration 159
9.5 DNS Message Format 161
10 DNS Applications and Resource Records 176
10.1 Introduction 176
10.2 Name-Address Lookup Applications 178
10.3 Email and Antispam Management 191
10.4 Security Applications 205
10.5 Experimental Name-Address Lookup Records 217
10.6 Resource Record Summary 218
11 DNS Server Deployment Strategies 223
11.1 General Deployment Guidelines 224
11.2 General Deployment Building Blocks 224
11.3 External-External Category 226
11.4 External-Internal Category 231
11.5 Internal-Internal Category 232
11.6 Internal-External Category 237
11.7 Cross-Role Category 243
11.8 Putting it All Together 253
12 Securing DNS (Part I) 254
12.1 DNS Vulnerabilities 254
12.2 Mitigation Approaches 258
12.3 Non-DNSSEC Security Records 259
13 Securing DNS (Part II): DNSSEC 264
13.1 Digital Signatures 265
13.2 DNSSEC Overview 266
13.3 Configuring DNSSEC 268
13.4 The DNSSEC Resolution Process 290
13.5 Key Rollover 297
Part IV IPAM Integration
14 IP Address Management Practices 305
14.1 FCAPS Summary 306
14.2 Common IP Management Tasks 307
14.3 Configuration Management 307
14.4 Fault Management 324
14.5 Accounting Management 334
14.6 Performance Management 338
14.7 Security Management 340
14.8 Disaster Recovery/Business Continuity 340
14.9 ITIL Process Mappings 342
14.10 Conclusion 346
15 IPv6 Deployment and IPv4 Coexistence 347
15.1 Introduction 347
15.2 Dual-Stack Approach 349
15.3 Tunneling Approaches 353
15.4 Translation Approaches 368
15.5 Application Migration 374
15.6 Planning the IPv6 Deployment Process 374
Bibliography 383
Glossary 392
RFC index 394
Index 408
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