This is my finals in networking help me with this,...

创建于:2026年5月20日

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问题

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This is my finals in networking help me with this, understand each line in the paper and my prof is very strict on checking, he ask one of my classmate when she tried to pass her work in Cisco packet tracer and our prof being mean said "did u read the rubrics "

思考

Planning the networking assignment help

The user wants help with a final networking assignment. I probably need to break down each requirement and explain them in detail based on the images, which I can analyze manually. I don’t need to access the web or perform OCR. I'll help with design and possibly provide a candidate solution like a VLAN table and topology.

Thought for 8s

回答

Yes — your professor is basically checking whether your Packet Tracer/floor plan matches every rubric line, not just whether devices are connected.

Here is the safest way to design it so it looks like you actually followed the rubric.

What your final project must include

You are designing a network for Nexus Dynamics, a creative agency with:

One floor, about 5,000 sq. ft.

Rooms/departments:

  • Reception
  • Design
  • Admin
  • IT
  • HR
  • Dedicated Server Room

Required devices:

  • 1 rack-mount router
  • 1 Layer 3 switch
  • 1 48-port patch panel
  • 4 managed access switches
  • 2 wallmount cabinets / IDFs
  • 40 workstations
  • 5 network printers
  • 4 wireless access points
  • 1 dedicated PC server
  • 1 UPS
  • 42U server rack

Recommended network design

Use a 3-tier hierarchical design because the rubric says that is the “Master / Enterprise Grade” answer.

Core / Server Room

Inside the Server Room rack:

  1. ISP / Internet Cloud
  2. Rack-mount Router
  3. Layer 3 Core Switch
  4. 48-port Patch Panel
  5. Dedicated Server
  6. UPS

Important rubric detail:
Your patch panel must be directly above the switch to show short patching.

Example rack elevation:

text
42U Rack - Server Room U42-U38 Cable manager / blank space U37-U35 Dedicated PC Server U34-U33 Rack-mount Router U32 48-port Patch Panel U31 Layer 3 Core Switch U30-U25 Cable management / future growth U24-U10 Reserved dark fiber/copper expansion U09-U01 UPS

Label it clearly:
Patch Panel directly above Core Switch for 1-to-1 short patching.

Wallmount / IDF placement

You need 2 wallmount cabinets. Do not place them randomly.

Use this:

IDF-1 Wallmount Cabinet

Place near:

  • Reception
  • Admin
  • HR

Contains:

  • 2 managed switches

Serves:

  • Reception PCs
  • Admin PCs
  • HR PCs
  • nearby printer
  • nearby wireless access point

IDF-2 Wallmount Cabinet

Place near:

  • Design
  • IT

Contains:

  • 2 managed switches

Serves:

  • Design PCs
  • IT PCs
  • printers
  • wireless access points

Why this is strong: it shows you minimized cable length and avoided cable runs over 90 meters.

On your floor plan, write:

text
All horizontal cable runs from wallmount cabinets or server room to endpoints are under 90 meters. Wallmount cabinets are placed close to high-density user areas to reduce cable congestion.

Logical topology

Draw it like this:

text
Internet / ISP | Rack-Mount Router | Layer 3 Core Switch | ------------------------------------------------ | | | Trunk to IDF-1 Trunk to IDF-2 Server VLAN | | | Access Switches Access Switches Dedicated Server | | Reception/Admin/HR Design/IT PCs, Printers, APs PCs, Printers, APs

Use trunk links from the Layer 3 switch to the access switches.

Label them:

text
802.1Q Trunk Links VLAN 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 99 allowed

VLAN and IP addressing table

Use a private Class C scheme. This is clean and easy.

VLANNameDepartment / UseSubnetGateway
10DESIGNDesign Department192.168.10.0/24192.168.10.1
20ADMINAdmin Department192.168.20.0/24192.168.20.1
30HRHR Department192.168.30.0/24192.168.30.1
40ITIT Department192.168.40.0/24192.168.40.1
50VOIPVoice / IP Phones192.168.50.0/24192.168.50.1
60SERVERServer Room192.168.60.0/24192.168.60.1
70PRINTERSNetwork Printers192.168.70.0/24192.168.70.1
80WIFIWireless AP Users192.168.80.0/24192.168.80.1
99MGMTSwitch/AP Management192.168.99.0/24192.168.99.1

This is better than only four VLANs because the paper says at least four. More VLANs shows planning.

Endpoint plan

You need 40 workstations total. You can divide them like this:

AreaWorkstationsPrinterAP
Reception411
Design1421
Admin811
IT811
HR600
Total4054

This matches the required components exactly.

Hardware specification

For the “Master” rubric, do not use home routers. Use enterprise-style names.

Use labels like:

text
Rack Router: Cisco ISR 4331 or equivalent Layer 3 Core Switch: Cisco Catalyst 3560 / 3650 / 3850 Access Switches: 4x Cisco Catalyst 2960 / 9200 series Patch Panel: 1x 48-port Cat6 patch panel Wallmounts: 2x 12U IDF wallmount enclosures Wireless: 4x business-grade wireless access points Cabling: Cat6 horizontal cabling Backbone/Uplinks: Fiber or Cat6A trunk links from IDFs to server room UPS: Rack-mounted UPS for router, switch, and server

Also write:

text
Port count allows 20–30% future growth.

That exact line matters because the rubric mentions 20–30% dark fiber/copper for future expansion.

Cable management and pathways

On the floor plan, draw or label:

  • Cable trays
  • Conduits
  • Drops to workstations
  • Wall jacks
  • Patch panel
  • IDF cabinets
  • Server room rack

Use this wording:

text
Horizontal Cat6 cable runs are routed through cable trays/conduits. Each endpoint connects to a wall jack, then to the patch panel, then to the access/core switch. No PC is directly cabled across the floor to a switch.

That protects you from the self-check question:

Did I use patch panels, or did I “cheat” by drawing lines straight from the PC to the switch?

Thermal considerations

For the server room diagram, label:

text
Cooling Intake Zone: front of rack Hot Exhaust Zone: rear of rack

Also add:

text
Rack has front-to-back airflow. Technician walkway is provided around the rack. UPS is placed at the bottom for weight stability.

What to submit

Your final work should have four separate pages/sections:

1. Floor Plan Map

Must show:

  • Walls
  • Departments
  • Server room
  • Furniture/desks
  • 40 PCs
  • 5 printers
  • 4 APs
  • 2 wallmount IDFs
  • Cable drops
  • Cable trays/conduits
  • Label that runs are under 90m

2. Rack Elevation Diagram

Must show:

  • 42U rack
  • Router
  • Layer 3 switch
  • Patch panel directly above switch
  • Server
  • UPS
  • Cooling intake/exhaust

3. Logical Network Diagram

Must show:

  • ISP
  • Router
  • Layer 3 switch
  • VLANs
  • Trunk links
  • Access switches
  • Server
  • End-user PCs

4. IP Addressing Table

Use the VLAN table above.

Packet Tracer warning

Packet Tracer alone may not show your physical floor planning well. Your professor probably wants more than devices connected.

So in Packet Tracer, add notes/labels such as:

text
Server Room / MDF IDF-1 Wallmount Cabinet IDF-2 Wallmount Cabinet 802.1Q Trunk VLAN 10 Design VLAN 20 Admin VLAN 30 HR VLAN 40 IT VLAN 50 VoIP VLAN 99 Management Patch Panel above Switch Cable runs under 90 meters

The most important things your professor will check

Make sure these are obvious:

  1. You used patch panels, not direct PC-to-switch cable mess.
  2. You used a 2-tier or 3-tier hierarchy, not a flat daisy-chain network.
  3. You used VLANs with subnet/gateway planning.
  4. You placed wallmount cabinets logically near departments.
  5. You included server room rack layout with UPS, patch panel, router, switch, and server.
  6. You showed thermal intake and exhaust zones.
  7. You allowed future growth, around 20–30%.
  8. You included all required devices: 40 PCs, 5 printers, 4 APs, 4 switches, 2 wallmounts, server, UPS, router, L3 switch, patch panel.

A simple way to avoid your professor saying “did you read the rubrics?” is to put rubric words directly on your diagrams: 3-tier hierarchy, patch panel, wallmount strategy, under 90m cable runs, VLAN segmentation, management VLAN, thermal intake/exhaust, 20–30% future growth.

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