Packet Tracer Lab Manual PDF
Packet Tracer Lab Manual PDF
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Networking for Homes and Small Businesses Student Packet Tracer Lab Manual
This document is exclusive property of Cisco Systems, Inc. Permission is granted to print and copy this document for non-commercial distribution and exclusive use by instructors in the CCNA Discovery: Networking for Homes and Small Businesses course as part of an official Cisco Networking Academy Program.
CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Network
Step 1: Create a logical network diagram with two PCs and a hub
The bottom left-hand corner of the Packet Tracer screen displays eight icons that represent device categories or groups, such as Routers, Switches, or End Devices. Moving the cursor over the device categories will show the name of the category in the box. To select a device, first select the device category. Once the device category is selected, the options within that category appear in the box next to the category listings. Select the device option that is required. a) Select End Devices from the options in the bottom left-hand corner. Drag and drop two generic PCs onto your design area. b) Select Hubs from the options in the bottom left-hand corner. Add a hub to the prototype network by dragging and dropping a generic hub onto the design area. c) Select Connections from the bottom left-hand corner. Choose a Copper Straight-through cable type. Click the first host, PC0, and assign the cable to the FastEthernet connector. Click the hub, Hub0, and select a connection port, Port 0, to connect to PC0. d) Repeat Step c for the second PC, PC1, to connect the PC to Port 1 on the hub. *There should be green dots at both ends of each cable connection. If not, check the cable type selected.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Network
d) Select the Config tab. Change the PC Display Name to PC-B. Select the FastEthernet tab on the left and add the IP address of 192.168.1.2 and subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. Close the PC-B configuration window.
Step 3: Observe the flow of data from PC-A to PC-B by creating network traffic
a) Switch to Simulation mode by selecting the tab that is partially hidden behind the Realtime tab in the bottom right-hand corner. The tab has the icon of a stopwatch on it. b) Click the Edit Filters button in the Edit List Filters area. Clicking the Edit Filters button will create a pop-up window. In the pop-up window, click the Show All/None box to deselect every filter. Select just the ARP and ICMP filters. c) Select a Simple PDU by clicking the closed envelope on the right vertical toolbar. Move your cursor to the display area of your screen. Click PC-A to establish the source. Move your cursor to PC-B and click to establish the destination. **Notice that two envelopes are now positioned beside PC-A. One envelope is ICMP, while the other is ARP. The Event List in the Simulation Panel will identify exactly which envelope represents ICMP and which represents ARP. d) Select Auto Capture / Play from the Play Controls area of the Simulation Panel. Below the Auto Capture / Play button is a horizontal bar, with a vertical button that controls the speed of the simulation. Dragging the button to the right will speed up the simulation, while dragging is to the left will slow down the simulation. e) The animation will run until the message window No More Events appears. All requested events have been completed. Select OK to close the message box. f) Choose the Reset Simulation button in the Simulation Panel. Notice that the ARP envelope is no longer present. This has reset the simulation but has not cleared any configuration changes or dynamic table entries, such as ARP table entries. The ARP request is not necessary to complete the ping command because PC-A already has the MAC address in the ARP table.
g) Choose the Capture / Forward button. The ICMP envelope will move from the source to the hub and stop. The Capture / Forward button allows you to run the simulation one step at a time. Continue selecting the Capture / Forward button until you complete the event. h) Choose the Power Cycle Devices button on the bottom left, above the device icons. i) An error message will appear asking you to confirm reset. Choose Yes. Now both the ICMP and ARP envelops are present again. The Reset Network button will clear any configuration changes not saved and will clear all dynamic table entries, such as the ARP and MAC table entries.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Network
d) Click the Select Tool on the right vertical tool bar. (This is the first icon present in the toolbar.) e) Click PC-A and select the Desktop tab. f) Select the Command Prompt and type the command arp -a and press enter to view the ARP table from the desktop view. Close the PC-A configuration window.
g) Examine the ARP table for PC-B. h) Close the PC-B configuration window. i) Click the Check Results button at the bottom of the instruction window to verify that the topology is correct.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Network
Background
A client has requested that you set up a simple network with two PCs connected to a switch. Verify that the hardware, along with the given configurations, meet the requirements of the client.
CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Network
Pinging 192.168.10.11 with 32 bytes of data: Reply Reply Reply Reply from from from from 192.168.10.11: 192.168.10.11: 192.168.10.11: 192.168.10.11: bytes=32 bytes=32 bytes=32 bytes=32 time=170ms TTL=128 time=71ms TTL=128 time=70ms TTL=128 time=68ms TTL=128
Ping statistics for 192.168.10.11: Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 68ms, Maximum = 170ms, Average = 94ms Close the configuration window. c) Click the Check Results button at the bottom of the instruction window to check your work.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Connecting to the Internet Through an ISP
This activity will begin showing 100% completion. This is because the activity is designed to demonstrate the behavior of ping and tracert. This activity is not designed to be graded.
Background
A network administrator wants to verify the path a packet takes to get to a destination web server.
Step 1: Verify connectivity from the source host to the destination host
a) Open the source host command prompt window and ping the destination 1. Select PC0. 2. Select the Desktop tab > Command Prompt 3. Type: ping 192.168.3.2 and press enter. *A Reply verifies connectivity from the host to the destination device. It does not indicate the path that was taken to reach it. **The first few pings may time out while devices load. If all pings time out, repeat the command.
CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v 4.0: Connecting to the Internet Through an ISP
d) In the work area window, click the network cloud to expand it and view router devices connected within the cloud. The source and destination devices are off screen. The focus is on the Routers within the network cloud only and packets forwarded between these devices. e) Use the Auto Capture / Play button in the Simulation Panel window and observe the path the packet travels to reach the destination. *Notice within the Event List, there are three routers used between source and destination. This is the same path indicated in the earlier PC command prompt window using the tracert command.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
Background
A home user wants to use a Linksys-WRT300N device to connect three PCs. All three PCs should obtain an IP address automatically from the Linksys device.
CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
d) Type ping 192.168.5.26 to ping PC0. *You should receive a reply from both devices. e) Close the configuration window and click Check Results button at the bottom of the instruction window to check your work. f) Choose the Assessment Items tab to view any configurations that were not done correctly.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
All contents are Copyright 19922007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
c) Check the IP configuration of each PC using the ipconfig /all command in the Command Prompt found under the Desktop tab. *Note: These devices will receive a private address. Private addresses are not able to cross the Internet, therefore, NAT translation must occur. d) Close all PC configuration windows.
Step 5: View the header information of the packets that traveled across the network
a) Examine the headers of the packets sent between the PC and the web server. 1. In the Simulation Panel, double click the third line down in the Event List. This displays an envelope in the work area that represents that line. 2. Click the envelope in the work area window to view the packet and header information. b) Click the Inbound PDU Details tab. Examine the packet information for the source (SRC) IP address and destination IP address.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Addressing
c) Click the Outbound PDU Details tab. Examine the packet information for the source (SRC) IP address and destination IP address. *Notice the change in SRC IP address. d) Click through other event lines to view those headers throughout the process. e) When finished, click the Check Results button at the bottom of the instruction window to check your work.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Services
Step 4: Observe traffic between the client and the web server
a) Enter Simulation mode by clicking the Simulation tab in the lower right-hand corner. The Simulation tab is located behind the Realtime tab and has a stopwatch symbol. b) Double click the Simulation Panel to unlock it from the PT window. This allows you to move the Simulation Panel to view the entire network topology. c) View traffic by creating a Complex PDU in Simulation mode
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Services
1. From the Simulation Panel, select Edit Filters and check only the boxes for TCP and HTTP. 2. Add a Complex PDU by clicking the open envelope located above the Simulation mode icon. 3. Click the External Client to specify it as the source. The complex PDU window will appear. 4. Click the ciscolearn.web.com server to specify it as the destination device. Notice the IP address of the web server will appear in the destination box within the complex PDU window. d) Specify the Complex PDU settings by changing the following within the complex PDU window: 1. Under PDU Settings > Select Application should be set to HTTP. 2. For the Source Port type 1000. 3. Under Simulation Settings select Periodic Interval and type 120 seconds. 4. Create the PDU by clicking the box Create PDU in the Create Complex PDU window. e) Observe the traffic flow by clicking the Auto Capture / Play button in the Simulation Panel. Speed up the animation by using the play control slider. *When the Buffer Full window appears, close the window using the x. f) Scroll through the Event List. Notice the number of packets that traveled from source to destination. HTTP is a TCP protocol, which requires connection establishment and acknowledgement of receipt of packets, considerably increasing the amount of traffic overhead.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Services
Step 2: View the header information of the packets that traveled across the network
a) Examine the headers of the packets sent between the clients and server.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Network Services
1. In the Simulation Panel, click any one of the lines in the Event List. This displays an envelope in the work area that represents that line. 2. Click the envelope in the work area window to view the packet and header information. 3. The OSI Model window displays within which layer of the OSI model the packet is being processed. *Notice that depending on the device that received the packet, the higher or lower the layer included. A switch will only display the packet to Layer 2. Whereas, the PC or Server will display the packet up to Layer 4. 4. In the OSI Model window, read the description of the packet. 5. Click the Inbound PDU Details, or Outbound PDU Details to view the actual packet sent. *Note the MAC address within the frame, the IP address information within the packet, and the source and destination port number within the segment. 6. Click through other event lines to read those descriptions as well
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Troubleshooting Your Network
Background
A small business owner cannot connect to the Internet with one of the four PCs in the office. All of the PCs are configured with static IP addressing. Use the ipconfig /all command to identify which PC is incorrectly configured.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Troubleshooting Your Network
Background
A small business owner learns that the user of PC2 is unable to access a website. All PCs are configured with static IP addressing. Use the ping command to identify the issue.
c) Did the ping return a reply? What is the IP address returned, if any?
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Troubleshooting Your Network
Step 5: Compare the DNS server information on PC2 with other PCs on the local network
a) Access the Command Prompt of PC1. b) Using the command ipconfig /all, examine the DNS server configuration on PC1. c) Access the Command Prompt of PC2. d) Using the command ipconfig /all, examine the DNS server configuration on PC2. Do the two configurations match? ____________________________________________________________________________________
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Background
A small business owner learns that a wireless user is unable to access the network. All devices are configured with static addressing. Identify and correct the issue.
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d) Examine the basic wireless setup information. What is the SSID? Does it match that configured on the client? e) Click on the Wireless security submenu. f) Examine security settings. Is WEP enabled? Does the key match that configured on the client?
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Troubleshooting Your Network
Background
A small business owner learns that a wireless user is unable to access the network. All of the PCs are configured with static IP addressing. Identify and resolve the issue.
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CCNA Discovery Networking for Home and Small Businesses v4.0: Troubleshooting Your Network
e) Click the Wireless Security submenu. f) Examine the security settings. Is WEP enabled? Does the key match the key configured on the client?
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