Lab 4.5.1  Identifying Traffic Flows
Step 1: Cable  and configure the current network
a. Referring to the topology diagram, connect the console (or  rollover) cable to the console port on the
router and the other cable end to  the host computer with a DB-9 or DB-25 adapter to the COM 1 port.
Ensure that power has been applied  to both the host computer and router.
b. Establish a HyperTerminal or other terminal emulation  program to the router.
c. From  the command prompt on Host1, ping between Host1 and Discovery Server to  confirm network
connectivity.  Troubleshoot and establish connectivity if the pings fail.
Step 2: Configure NetFlow  on the interfaces
From the  global configuration mode, issue the following commands to configure  NetFlow:
FC-CPE-1(config)#interface fastethernet 0/0
FC-CPE-1(config-if)#ip flow egress
FC-CPE-1(config-if)#ip flow ingress
FC-CPE-1(config-if)#interface fastethernet 0/1
FC-CPE-1(config-if)#ip flow ingress
FC-CPE-1(config-if)#ip flow egress
Step 3: Verify the  NetFlow configuration
a.  From the privileged EXEC mode, issue the show ip flow  interface command.
FC-CPE-1#show ip flow interface
FastEthernet0/0
ip  flow ingress
ip flow egress
FastEthernet0/1
ip flow ingress
ip flow egress
Confirm that the output shown above  is displayed. Troubleshoot your configuration if this output is not
displayed.
b. From the privileged EXEC mode,  issue the following command to ensure that flow cache statistics are
reset:
FC-CPE-1#clear ip flow  stats
Step 4: Create network data traffic
A range of network application data  flows is to be generated and captured. Generate as many of the data
flows shown below as is possible in  your lab. Your instructor will advise you of the particular applications  that are available to be used in this lab.
a. Ping the Discovery Server from  Host1 to generate a data flow.
From the command line of Host1, issue the command ping 172.17.1.1 -n 200
b. Telnet to the Discovery Server from Host1.
If Discovery Server is being used,  issue the command telnet server.discovery.ccna from  the
command prompt of Host1.
If Discovery Server is not being  used, DNS is not configured , or if a terminal program such as
HyperTerminal or TeraTerm is being  used, telnet from Host1 to 172.17.1.1.
c. On Host1, launch a web browser and enter the URL  http://server.discovery.ccna
If  Discovery Server is not being used or DNS is not configured, then use  http://172.17.1.1 to access
the  web services configured on that server.
d. Use FTP to download a file.
On Host1, launch a web browser and enter the URL ftp://server.discovery.ccna, or issue
ftp  server.discovery.ccna from the command line. If DNS is not  configured use the IP
address  172.17.1.1 instead of the domain name.
Download a file from the server.
e. If email accounts have been  configured using the POP3 and SMTP services on Discovery Server,
send an email using one of these  accounts.
Step 5: View the data  flows
At the conclusion of  the data flow, view the details by issuing the show ip cache  flow command from privileged EXEC mode.
FC-CPE-1#show ip cache  flow
Output similar to this  will be displayed.
IP packet  size distribution (3969 total packets):
1-32 64 96 128 160 192 224 256 288 320 352 384 416 448 480
.000 .351 .395 .004 .011 .001 .005  .009 .001 .002 .005 .001 .000 .000 .000
512 544 576 1024 1536 2048 2560 3072 3584 4096 4608
.000 .000 .013 .000 .195 .000 .000  .000 .000 .000 .000
IP Flow  Switching Cache, 278544 bytes
2 active, 4094 inactive, 1368 added
22316 ager polls, 0 flow alloc  failures
Active flows timeout in  30 minutes
Inactive flows  timeout in 15 seconds
IP Sub  Flow Cache, 17416 bytes
0 active,  1024 inactive, 0 added, 0 added to flow
0 alloc failures, 0 force free
1 chunk, 0 chunks added
last clearing of statistics 02:50:15
Protocol Total Flows Packets Bytes  Packets Active(Sec) Idle(Sec)
——– Flows /Sec /Flow /Pkt /Sec /Flow /Flow
TCP-Telnet 9 0.0 13 47 0.0 5.2 10.8
TCP-FTP 28 0.0 7 62 0.0 0.8 10.4
TCP-WWW 64 0.0 7 138 0.0 0.3 2.1
TCP-other 16 0.0 75 840 0.1 0.0 4.1
UDP-DNS 878 0.0 1 72 0.0 0.0 15.4
UDP-other 347 0.0 3 88 0.1 4.5 15.5
ICMP 26 0.0 1 70 0.0 0.8 15.4
Total: 1368 0.1 2 318 0.3 1.2 14.6
< output omitted >
From your output, list the name of  each protocol with the number of flows. Answers vary. Examples shown.
Telnet 9 flows
FTP 28 flows
WWW 64 flows
DNS 878 flows
ICMP 26 flows
TCP other 16 flows
UDP other 347 flows
What was the total number of packets  generated? 3969 packets
Which protocol generated the most  packets? TCP other (75 x 16 = 1200)
Which protocol produced the most  bytes per flow? TCP other (75 x 840 = 63000)
Which protocol’s flows were on the  network the longest time? Telnet 5.2 sec
Which protocol used the longest  amount of network time? UDP other (4.5 x 347 = 1561.5  sec)
Step 6: Clean up
Erase the configurations and reload  the routers and switches. Disconnect and store the cabling. For PC hosts  that are normally connected to other networks (such as the school LAN  or to the Internet), reconnect the appropriate cabling and restore the  TCP/IP settings.
Step 7: Reflection
Create a projected applications document listing the  applications planned to use the network.
| Application Type | Application | Protocol | Prioritas | Comments | 
| MS Outlook | SMTP | Menengah | Semua pengguna | |
| Voice | Call Manager/SIP | VRTP | Tinggi | Semua pengguna | 
| Web | Apache Server | HTTP | Rendah | Semua pengguna | 
| Database | SQL Server | TCP | Menengah | Restricted user | 
 
 
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