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WGU C700 - Secure Network Design With complete solution | Updated 2024/25 $11.99   Add to cart

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WGU C700 - Secure Network Design With complete solution | Updated 2024/25

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WGU C700 - Secure Network Design With complete solution | Updated 2024/25

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  • August 15, 2024
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  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • WGU C700 - Secure Network Design
  • WGU C700 - Secure Network Design
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WGU C700 - Secure Network Design
With complete solution | Updated
2024/25
DDoS Attack - A distributed denial-of-service attack tries to reduce or eliminate a
resource's ability to serve its users. The attacker overwhelms the resource by sending a
flood of messages from many compromised computers.

IoT (Internet of Things) - IoT devices are usually small devices such as surveillance
cameras that communicate directly with one another without human involvement.

There will soon be more IoT device using the Internet than humans surfing the Web,
sending e-mail, sending Excel and Word files, and doing other "humanish" things.

ISPs (Internet Service Providers) - Internet transmission or the delivery of traffic from
source to destination computers.

Hosts - Devices that are connected to the internet are called hosts.

IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) - controls and documents who owns
what IP addresses, since every single connected device outside of private networks
needs a unique address. The IANA prevents address duplication and ensures that
devices can access the World Wide Web.

IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) - An organization that sets standards for how
systems communicate over the Internet (for example, how protocols operate and
interact).

Cloud - An image that indicates that the user does not need to know what goes on
within the Internet. A general name for services provided by companies over the
Internet.

Application Messages - A message sent from one networked application to another
over a network.

Server Hosts - The one that provides service is the server host.
Provides services to client hosts.
Server hosts include servers on server racks

Client Hosts - The one that receives service is the client host.
Receives services from the server host.
Client hosts include your mobile phone, tablet, PC, smartwatch, or anything else you
use to access services on the internet.

, Rack Servers - A server that fits in a standard equipment rack. Most servers are
stored in equipment racks that are 48 cm (19 inches) wide and a standard height unit, or
U, is 1.75 inches tall. Each rack can hold several rack servers positioned one on top of
another.

U Formula:
U rack x U height = inches available space
22 U rack x 1.75 = 38.5 inches of usable space

Networked Applications - Those applications that require a network to communicate
with one another in order to function.

Your browser, which is your client program, sends a request message to the webserver.
This is an HTTP request message because HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) is the
standard for browser-webserver interactions. This request message asks for a file to be
delivered. The webserver server program on the webserver locates the file and sends it
back in an HTTP response message containing the requested file (or an error message
to say why it could not be delivered).

Client Program - Program that receives service from a server program on a server
host.

Request Message - In request-response cycles, a message a client programs sends
to request service from a server application program.

HTTP Request Message - In HTTP, a message in which a client requests a file or
another service from a server.

HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) - The protocol that governs interactions between
the browser and the webserver application program.

The standard for browser-webserver interactions.

Server Program - Program on a server host that provides service to a client program
on a client host.

HTTP Response Message - In HTTP, a message in which a server responds to a
client request; contains either a requested file or an error message explaining why the
requested file could not be supplied.

Source Host - Host that transmit a message to another host, the destination host.
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Destination Host - Host that receives a message from another host, the source host.
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Transmission - A source host sends an application message to a destination host.
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