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Sun Certified
Network Administrator for Solaris 10 OS
Overview
The Sun Certified Network Administrator for the Solaris 10 Operating
System exam is for candidates with three or more years of experience
administering Sun systems in a networked environment/working in a
network capacity. A test candidate must already be a Sun Certified
System Administrator to qualify to take this examination. This
certification exam tests the candidate has an in-depth knowledge of
network administration skills, such as those covered in the SA-300-S10
courseware. The examination includes multiple-choice, scenario-based
questions, drag-and-drop questions, and requires extensive knowledge on
Solaris network administration topics including how to configure and
manage the Network interface layer, the network (Internet and Transport
layers), network applications, and the Solaris IP Filter.
Details
Prerequisites:
Previous Solaris OS System Administrator Certification in any
version of the Solaris Operating System
Other
exams/assignments required for this certification: N/A
Exam type:
Multiple choice, free response
Number of
questions: 64
Pass score: 62%
Time limit: 105
Prerequisites
Previous Solaris OS System Administrator Certification in any version of
the Solaris Operating System
Exam Objectives
Section 1: Configure the Network Interface Layer
Explain network
model fundamentals (network protocols and advantages of a layered
model), layers of the TCP/IP model (Network interface, Internet,
Transport, and Application), and peer-to-peer communication.
Explain network
topologies (BUS, STAR, RING, VLAN), LAN media (IEEE identifiers and
IEEE 802.3 types), and network devices (shared hubs, bridges, and
switches)
Explain Ethernet
concepts (CSMA/CD access method, difference between full-duplex and
half-duplex, Ethernet statistics, and Ethernet frames, including
Ethernet addresses, Ethernet address types, local Ethernet address,
Ethernet-II frame, Ethernet frame encapsulation, maximum transfer
unit, and Ethernet frame errors)
Use network
utilities like snoop, netstat, and ndd to configure and troubleshoot
network interfaces.
Examine and
manage ARP and RARP, including the ARP table, in.rarpd and the hosts
and ethers databases.
Section 2: Configure
the Network (Internet and Transport layers)
Explain Internet
layer protocols, IP datagrams, IP address types (unicast, broadcast,
and multicast), configure netmasks for subnetting and VLSM, manage
interface configuration files and configure/unconfigure logical
interfaces.
Explain how to
increase throughput and availability and given a scenario, implement
and troubleshoot multipathing through the use of both configuration
files and the command line.
Distinguish
between direct routes, indirect routes, route table populations
(static, default, and dynamic), explain routing protocols (interior
and exterior gateway), and routing tables (entries, flags, search
order, host route, network route, and default route.)
Configure a
static route (/etc/defaultrouter, /etc/gateways and manual) and
explain router discovery protocol (RDISC).
Distinguish
between the procedures associated with dynamic routing for both RIP
versions 1 and 2 and manage the in.routed daemon and explain the
operation of CIDR.
Configure boot
time routing: initialize a router, a multihomed host, a non router
and enable IP forwarding and routing, additionally, given a
scenario, troubleshoot router configuration.
Explain the IPv6
addressing to include IPv6 autoconfiguration, unicast, and multicast
address types.
Configure and
troubleshoot IPv6 non-routers, routers, and IPv6 6to4 routers.
Manage IPv6
(display critical information and modify, configure, and
troubleshoot interfaces).
Configure IPv6
multipathing both manually and at boot time.
Explain the types
of protocols found in the Transport layer and examine TCP flow
control.
Section 3: Configure
and Manage Network Applications (Application layer)
Explain the DNS
basics (BIND, top level domains, zones of authority, server types,
answer types, name resolution process, and resource records)
Given a scenario,
configure and troubleshoot a DNS server.
Given a specific
network, configure a DHCP server using appropriate utilities, and
configure and manage DHCP clients.
Troubleshoot DHCP
server, DHCP client, and acquire a new lease manually.
Configure an NTP
server and an NTP client, and given a scenario, troubleshoot NTP
using messages and snoop.
Section 4: Configure
Solaris IP Filter
Configure the
behavior of Solaris IP Filter using packet direction (in keywords
and out keywords), and using rule processing (block keywords, pass
keywords, quick keywords, and group keywords)
Configure and
modify filtering on an IP address, network interface, protocol type,
and port.
Configure logging
in Solaris IP Filter, passed packets, blocked packets, and rule
match and analyze logged information and statistics.