Preface
This book is not a general introduction to network troubleshooting. Rather, it is about one aspect of troubleshooting—information collection. This book is a tutorial introduction to tools and techniques for collecting information about computer networks. It should be particularly useful when dealing with network problems, but the tools and techniques it describes are not limited to troubleshooting. Many can and should be used on a regular basis regardless of whether you are having problems.
Some of the tools I have selected may be a bit surprising to many. I strongly believe that the best approach to troubleshooting is to be proactive, and the tools I discuss reflect this belief. Basically, if you don’t understand how your network works before you have problems, you will find it very difficult to diagnose problems when they occur. Many of the tools described here should be used before you have problems. As such, these tools could just as easily be classified as network management or network performance analysis tools.
This book does not attempt to catalog every possible tool. There are simply too many tools already available, and the number is growing too rapidly. Rather, this book focuses on the tools that I believe are the most useful, a collection that should help in dealing with almost any problem you see. I have tried to include pointers to other relevant tools when there wasn’t space to discuss them. In many cases, I have described more than one tool for a particular ...
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