| Sl.No. |
Book
Name |
Description |
| 1 |
Introduction
to Networking Technologies |
This
document describes a sampling of technologies of
various types, by using a tutorial approach. |
| 2 |
Introduction
to Storage Area Networks |
It
illustrates where SANs are today, who are the main
industry organizations and standard bodies active
in the SAN world, and it positions IBM's
comprehensive, best-of-breed approach of enabling
SANs with its products and services. |
| 3 |
Understanding
LDAP - Design and Implementation |
This
book create a foundation of LDAP skills, as well
as install and configure the IBM Directory Server. |
| 4 |
TCP/IP
Tutorial and Technical Overview |
Introduction
of hardware and TCP/IP networking capabilities in
the present world. A tutorial and technical
overview of TCP/IP |
| 5 |
Linux
Network Administrators Guide |
Provide
a single reference for network administration in a
Linux environment. Beginners and experienced users
alike should find the information they need to
cover nearly all important administration
activities required to manage a Linux network
configuration |
| 6 |
Introduction
to Data Communications |
Introduce
the concepts of data communication with a slight
leaning towards the Linux operating system |
| 7 |
Internetwork
Design Guide |
This
book is developed to assist professionals
preparing for Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert
(CCIE) candidacy, though it is a valuable resource
for all internetworking professionals. It is
designed for use in conjunction with other Cisco
manuals or as a standalone reference |
| 8 |
Internetworking
Troubleshooting Handbook |
Provide
networking professionals with a guide containing
solutions to the problems encountered in the field
in a format that is easy to apply |
| 9 |
Internetworking
Technology Handbook |
Discuss
about all the concepts in Internetowrking. A good
hand boo for all the netwroking professionals. |
| 10 |
DNS
for Rocket Scientists |
This
Open Source Guide is about DNS and (mostly) BIND
9.x on Linux (REDHAT Versions 6.x and 7.x) and the
BSD's (FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD). It is meant
for newbies, Rocket Scientist wannabees and anyone
in between. |
| 11 |
LDAP
for Rocket Scientists |
LDAP
concepts and administration. Schemas,
ObjectClasses, Attributes, DITs, Entries and
Operational Objects. OpenLDAP 2.x Quickstart,
slapd.conf and slurp.conf files. Common sample
inplementations - simple directory, common-login,
email operations. LDAP HOWTOs, LDIF files, LDAP
URLs. Functional Model, alternate Open Source LDAP
servers and tools. The Security Model |
| 12 |
Cisco
Documentation Library |
Various
documents from CISCO for Nwtworking, Security etc |
| 13 |
UNIX
Network Programming with TCP/IP |
UNIX
Networki programming with TCP/IP |
| 14 |
UNIX
Systems Programming I |
File
I/O, filters and file manipulation. Command line
arguments and environment variables. Terminal
handling and text based screen applications.
Interrupt handling. Finding the time. Mixing C and
scripts |
| 15 |
UNIX
Systems Programming II |
Advanced
file I/O including special devices. Process
handling (fork, exec etc.). Inter-process
communication via pipes, pseudo terminals. and
sockets. Blocking & non-blocking I/O, handling
multiple I/O streams using select. Other
miscellaneous system calls including timers.
Locking and caching issues |
| 16 |
Understanding
IP Addressing |
Everything
that a developer wanted to know about IP
addressing |
| 17 |
Network
programming using Internet Sockets |
This
document should give the average competent C
programmer the edge s/he needs to get a grip on
this networking noise. |
| 18 |
Unix
Scalability benchmarks |
UNIX
Scalability benchmarks in Kongress 2006 |
| 19 |
Windows
Sockets |
An
Open Interface for Network Programming under
Microsoft Windows |
| 20 |
Linux
Network Administrator's Guide, 2nd Edition |
This
bookl focus on TCP/IP most heavily because it is
the most popular protocol suite in use on both
Local Area Networks (LANs) and Wide Area Networks
(WANs), such as the Internet. This also take a
look at UUCP and IPX. UUCP was once commonly used
to transport news and mail messages over dialup
telephone connections. |