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101, Application Delivery Fundamentals, F5, F5 101, F5 101 Study Guide, F5 CA, F5 Certification, F5 networks, loadbalancer, protocols
The 101-Application Delivery Fundamentals exam is the first exam required to achieve F5 Certified BIG-IP Administrator status. All candidates must take this exam to move forward in the program.
Successful completion of the 101-Application Delivery Fundamentals exam acknowledges the skills and understanding necessary for day-to-day management of Application Delivery Networks (ADNs). This exam identifies candidates that possess the knowledge that is necessary to work with F5 products and technologies.
Section 1 – OSIApplication Delivery Fundamentals
The first section of the exam concentrates on some basic networking concepts, working up the OSI model from the bottom. Most of this information is common knowledge in the networking industry.
This section is worth 33% of the total test score.
Objective 1.01 – Explain, compare and contrast the OSI layer
OSI Model Wiki
Another OSI Model Overview
Objective 1.02 – Explain protocols and technologies specific to the data-link layer
ARP
ARP on F5
MAC Address
Broadcast Domain
VLANs
Link Aggregation Wiki
Big IP Link Aggregation
Objective 1.03 – Explain protocols and apply technologies specific to the network layer
Routing on F5
TCP/IP Overview
IP Addressing & Subnetting
Routing Protocols
IP Packet Fragmentation
IP TTL (Time to Live)
Objective 1.04 – Explain the features and functionality of protocols and technologies specific to the transport layer
MTU / MSS
TCP Functionality
TCP Connection Setup by Virtual Server Type
TCP Profile Settings (Tunables)
UDP Functionality
UDP Profile Settings (Tunables)
TCPDUMP on F5
Objective 1.05 – Explain the features and functionality of protocols and technologies specific to the application layer
Application Layer Traffic Managment on F5
HTTP Functionality
HTTP Status Codes
HTTP Headers
F5 HTTP White Paper
DNS Functionality
DNS Record Types
SIP Functionality
F5 SIP White Paper
FTP Functionality
SMTP Functionality
HTTP Cookies
My Name is URL
Section 2 – F5 Solutions and Technology
In this section, we get into the actual F5 Solutions. Most engineers taking this exam will be experienced with LTM and iRules, but little else. Hopefully, the familiarity gained from the F5 datasheets and white papers shown below will help you to understand the breadth of the F5 offerings. Prepare to take the first step into a larger world.
This section is also worth 33% of the total test score.
Objective 2.01 – Articulate the role of F5 products
Access Policy Manager (APM)
Application Security Manager (ASM)
Local Traffic Manager (LTM)
Global Traffic Manager (GTM)
Enterprise Manager (EM)
WAN Optimization Manager (WOM)
Web Accelerator
ARX File Virtualization
F5 White Papers
F5 Datasheets
Objective 2.02 – Explain the purpose, use and advantages of iRules
iRule Wiki (Requires Devcentral Login)
Objective 2.03 – Explain the purpose, use and advantages of iApps
iApp Wiki (Requires Devcentral Login)
Objective 2.04 – Explain the purpose, use and advantages of iControl
iControl Wiki (Requires Devcentral Login)
Objective 2.05 – Explain the purpose of and use cases for full proxy and packet forwarding / packet based architectures
Full Proxy Architecture (Lori MacVittie rules!)
Packet-Based vs Full Proxy
SNAT
Auto Last Hop
Virtual Server Types
Objective 2.06 – Explain the advantages and configurations of high availability (HA)
F5 HA Basics
Config Sync
Big IP HA Features
Mirroring
VLAN Failsafe
Section 3 – Load Balancing Essentials
This section is a short one compared to the previous two. It’s worth 17% of the total test score. If you’re going after an F5 certification, you’re probably already familiar with much of this material, so you probably won’t have to study as much for this section. It never hurts to brush up on the algorithms and persistence methods.
Objective 3.01 – Discuss the purpose of, use cases for, and key considerations related to load balancing
Load Balancing Wiki
Load Balancing 101
Load Balancing Algorithms (Devcentral)
More on Load Balancing Algorithms
Another Load Balancing Algorithm Article
Yet Another Load Balancing Algorithm Article
Persistence
Objective 3.02 – Differentiate between a client and a server
Client / Server on Wiki – Yes, I’m surprised this is even a question.
Section 4 – Security
This section is weighted at 11% of the total test score, but it feels like it should be more.
Objective 4.01 – Compare and contrast positive and negative security models
Positive Security Model
Positive vs Negative Security
Objective 4.02 – Explain the purpose and cryptographic services
Cryptography
SSL Certificates (Devcentral)
Certificate Chains
Public-Key Cryptography
Symmetric vs Asymmetric Encryption
Client SSL Profiles
Server SSL Profiles
SSLDUMP Utility
Objective 4.03 – Describe the purpose and advantages of authentication
F5 Authentication 101
AAA
Single Sign On
Multi-factor Authentication
Objective 4.04 – Describe the purpose, advantages and use cases of IPsec and SSL VPN
SSL VPN
IPsec VPN
IPSEC vs SSL VPN
Section 5 – Application Delivery Platforms
The final section is worth only 7% of the total test score. The finish line is in sight!
Objective 5.01 – Describe the purpose, advantages, use cases, and challenges associated with hardware-based application delivery platforms and virtual machines
Virtualization
Virtualization Platforms
Objective 5.02 – Describe the purpose of the various types of advanced acceleration techniques.
Application Performance Optimization
TCP Optimization
Oneconnect
Caching
Compression
Pipelining
Acceleration 101
Acceleration 102
So there you have it. Everything you need to pass the F5 Application Delivery Fundamentals exam, and probably more.
If you use this study guide, please comment and let me know if it was helpful and how you did on the test.