Day 02 Addressing

IP Addressing, Subnetting, and VLSM

Binary subnetting, CIDR notation, VLSM, and the address design that scales from a home lab to a campus network. The skill CCNA candidates most often fail on, mastered in one session.

~1 hour Intermediate Hands-on Precision AI Academy

Today's Objective

Binary subnetting, CIDR notation, VLSM, and the address design that scales from a home lab to a campus network. The skill CCNA candidates most often fail on, mastered in one session.

01

What You'll Cover Today

Day 2 of CCNA Prep in 5 Days builds directly on Day 1. You're moving from theory into applied practice. The concepts today require the foundation from yesterday, so if anything felt unclear, review it now.

ℹ️
Topics today: VLANs, RSTP, EtherChannel. Each section has code you can copy and run immediately.
02

VLANs

Understanding VLANs is the core goal of Day 2. The concept is straightforward once you see it in practice — most confusion comes from skipping the mental model and jumping straight to implementation. Start with the model, then write the code.

VLANs
# VLANs — Working Example
# Study this pattern carefully before writing your own version

class VLANsExample:
    """
    Demonstrates core VLANs concepts.
    Replace placeholder values with your real implementation.
    """
    
    def __init__(self, config: dict):
        self.config = config
        self._validate()
    
    def _validate(self):
        required = ['name', 'type']
        for field in required:
            if field not in self.config:
                raise ValueError(f"Missing required field: {field}")
    
    def process(self) -> dict:
        # Core logic goes here
        result = {
            'status': 'success',
            'topic': 'VLANs',
            'data': self.config
        }
        return result


# Usage
example = VLANsExample({
    'name': 'my-implementation',
    'type': 'vlans'
})
output = example.process()
print(output)
💡
Key insight: When working with VLANs, always start with the simplest possible case that works end-to-end. Complexity is easier to add than simplicity is to recover.
03

RSTP

RSTP is the practical application of VLANs in real projects. Once you understand the underlying model, RSTP becomes the natural next step.

💡
Pro tip: When working with RSTP, always read the official documentation for the exact version you're using. APIs change between major versions and generic tutorials often lag behind.
04

EtherChannel

EtherChannel rounds out today's lesson. It connects VLANs and RSTP into a complete picture. You'll use all three concepts together in the exercise below.

05

Common Mistakes on Day 2

📝 Day 2 Exercise
Switching & VLANs — Hands-On
  1. Set up your environment for today's topic: install required tools and verify the basics work before writing any logic.
  2. Implement a minimal working version of VLANs using the code example in this lesson as your starting point.
  3. Extend your implementation to incorporate RSTP — this is where the two concepts connect.
  4. Test your implementation with both valid and invalid inputs. What happens at the boundaries?
  5. Review your code: is there anything you'd name differently? Any function doing more than one thing? Refactor one thing.

Day 2 Summary

Challenge

Extend today's exercise by adding one feature that wasn't in the instructions. Document what you built in a comment at the top of the file. This habit of going one step further is what separates engineers who grow fast from those who stay stuck.

What's Next

The foundations from today carry directly into Day 3. In the next session the focus shifts to Routing Protocols — building directly on everything covered here.

Day 2 Checkpoint

Before moving on, verify you can answer these without looking:

  • What is the core concept introduced in this lesson, and why does it matter?
  • What are the two or three most common mistakes practitioners make with this topic?
  • Can you explain the key code pattern from this lesson to a colleague in plain language?
  • What would break first if you skipped the safeguards or best practices described here?
  • How does today's topic connect to what comes in Day 3?

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Continue To Day 3
Day 3: IP Services