Basic configuration information addresses
SIT272 Internet Core Layers and Routing
Project
| Student ID | Family Name | Given Name | |
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| 2. | |||
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Note: Marks indicated in BLUE only apply to groups of four. If there are less than four members in the group, all blue entries will receive a mark of 0.
Title Page (Awarded 2 Marks)
1/1 Contents page provided with sections and sub-sections as appropriate
1/1 Page number references provided
2/2 Summary adequately identifies major features of the solution
Budget (Awarded 15 Marks)
1/1 Equipment is broken down appropriately
1/1 Equipment costs are reasonable
1/1 Cabling costs are adequately sourced/referenced
1/1 Budget includes connections
Problem Description (Awarded 10 Marks)
The problem description is where the organisation proposing a solution describes the problem in their own words. This section has two major roles. Firstly, it provides context for the remainder of the document, a location for references to the problem for the solutions presented in later sections. Second, it allows the organisation looking to adopt the proposal to confirm that a correct understanding of the problem has been gained.
2/2 Other aspects adequately described (e.g., wall/ceiling cavities, floor tiling, cable runs, etc.)
Plan Amendments (Awarded 10 Marks)
Cabling Design (Awarded 40 Marks)
Cabling design is the critical component of the project. There should be clear connections between each of the floors and connections on each floor to each computer. Cabling should be laid out sensibly, i.e., a combination of feasible cable runs (any angle) but not in direct line from each device to a central switch. All cabling paths must be illustrated on a plan and justified in the text. Critically, maximum cable lengths must be adhered to for all connections to ensure correct operation of the network. No wireless networking is permitted. All cabling must be realistic, e.g., holes are not drilled under every computer, cables are protected by conduit, etc.
1/1 Circular table computers connections are adequately justified
1/1 Receptionist computers are connected to own subnet
1/1 Stock managers computers connections are adequately justified
First floor (20/20 marks):
1/1 Lab 1 connections justified adequately
1/1 Lab 2 has own subnet
1/1 Lab 3 server attached to Lab 1 subnet
1/1 Lab 3 connections illustrated on plan and are realistic
1/1 Lab 4 connections justified adequately
1/1 Instructor computers share a subnet
1/1 All computers share a subnet
1/1 All computers connections illustrated on plan and are realistic
Equipment Requirements (Awarded 15 Marks)
The required equipment will primarily be routers and switches. Research into what routers and switches provided the necessary capacity (port count, data rates, etc.) was required and should be evident in this section. Selection of all equipment must be clearly justified for addressing problems in the project, e.g., number of ports required on a switch, adequate WAN speed to support computers.
1/1 Reasonable placement of switches and routers on ground floor
1/1 Adequate router/s for second floor
1/1 Adequate router/s for third floor
1/1 Adequate justification of router/s selection for third floor
The network configuration section must include a number of components. Basic configuration information (IP addresses, subnet masks, etc.) must be determined for all devices. There must be a network diagram, similar to the Cisco Academy figures, illustrating the interconnection of network devices. Configuration directives for each router must be supplied.
2/2 Classful IP addresses determined for all routers
3/3 Reasonable ACL configuration for ground floor circular tables
3/3 Reasonable ACL configuration for ground floor receptionists desks
3/3 Reasonable ACL configuration for second floor call center computers
Summary and Conclusions (Awarded 5 Marks)
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