Level 4 · Expert

Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert (CCIE Enterprise Infrastructure)

The "fighter jet pilot" of the networking world. Two stages: the ENCOR 350-401 written (already done at Level 3) qualifies you for the legendary 8-hour hands-on lab exam — which fewer than 3% of network engineers ever pass. More than a certificate, this level is a way of thinking: predict the network's state before touching it. A CCIE number, once earned, is yours for life.

Choose your track: CCIE comes in flavors — Enterprise Infrastructure, Enterprise Wireless, Security, Service Provider, Data Center, Collaboration. This page maps Enterprise Infrastructure, the natural continuation of this roadmap; the study method is identical for all tracks.

# Lab Exam Blueprint — CCIE Enterprise Infrastructure

The 8-hour lab has two modules: Design (3 hrs) — scenario-based, no device access — and Deploy, Operate & Optimize (5 hrs) — hands-on against a large virtual topology. These five domains are tested across both.

My CCIE progress0 / 0
1. Network Infrastructure 30%
2. Software-Defined Infrastructure 25%
3. Transport Technologies & Solutions 15%
4. Infrastructure Security & Services 15%
5. Infrastructure Automation & Programmability 15%

# Lab Strategy — How CCIEs Actually Train

At this level "labs" stop being exercises and become a training regimen, like an athlete's. The pattern below is how successful candidates structure 12–18 months.

PHASE 1 — Technology Labs (months 1–6)

One technology at a time, to exhaustion: every OSPF area type, every BGP attribute, every DMVPN phase. Small focused topologies (4–8 devices), repeated until configs flow without thinking.

Real-world payoff: this is the depth that lets you debug a production BGP meltdown calmly while everyone else panics.
CML / EVE-NG ProDepth drilling

PHASE 2 — Full-Scale Topologies (months 6–12)

20–30 device enterprise topologies combining everything: campus + SD-Access + SD-WAN + MPLS WAN + DMVPN backup + multicast + QoS + automation. Build, break, rebuild weekly.

Real-world payoff: indistinguishable from a real Fortune 500 network. You are literally rehearsing the day job of a principal engineer.
CML (lab exam runs on it)INE / CCIE workbooksEnterprise scale

PHASE 3 — Mock Labs Under the Clock (months 12+)

Full 8-hour timed mock labs: 3-hour design module (paper-based scenarios, no CLI) + 5-hour deploy/operate module. Grade yourself ruthlessly; track points-per-hour.

Real-world payoff: the discipline of working a structured method under brutal time pressure — exactly what major-incident response requires.
Graded mock labsExam simulation

ONGOING — Troubleshooting Gauntlets

Take working topologies and have a study partner (or a script) plant 10 faults. Diagnose with a strict method: verify L1→L2→L3, control plane before data plane, never guess.

Real-world payoff: the trouble-ticket discipline that makes CCIEs the people airlines and banks call at 3 AM — and pay accordingly.
CML / EVE-NGFault injection

# Tools for This Level

Cisco Modeling Labs (CML)

Non-negotiable now — the actual lab exam runs on CML-based virtual gear. Train on what you'll be tested on.

EVE-NG Professional

For monster 30+ node topologies; many published CCIE workbook topologies ship as EVE-NG files. Needs a beefy server (64–128 GB RAM) or cloud instance.

INE / CCIE-specific workbooks

Structured expert-level lab workbooks and graded mock labs. The de-facto standard CCIE training vendors.

pyATS / Genie

Cisco's own network test framework — automate the verification of your own labs, and cover the automation domain at the same time.

Free

A study group

Online CCIE communities (Discord/forums) for mock-lab exchanges and fault-planting partners. Nobody passes this alone.

Free

A budget plan

Lab attempts, training content and lab infrastructure all add up — most candidates need two attempts. Plan ahead, and note that many employers fund CCIE preparation; ask.

Reality check: 12–18 months of 15–20 hrs/week on top of a CCNP-level day job. It's a marathon — but the payoff is true expert mastery and a lifetime CCIE number.

# Growth Check — After This Level

What Mastery Looks Like

  • I can predict the LSDB and BGP table before typing a show command — the network model runs in my head.
  • I can build a 20–30 device enterprise topology from memory, then break and repair it methodically.
  • Under an 8-hour clock, I stay calm and work a structured method — the same discipline a real 3 AM major incident demands.

Self-Check Before the Lab

  • Have I scored a passing grade on a full timed mock lab — twice in a row?
  • Can I explain every blueprint technology to a junior engineer in plain words?
  • Given 10 planted faults, do I diagnose layer by layer — control plane before data plane — without guessing?
  • Are the automation tasks gift points for me, or a gamble?

Growth Beyond the Number

  • Teach and mentor — guiding others through CCNA/CCNP cements expert knowledge permanently.
  • Write up the journey (what worked, what didn't) — reflection is how experience becomes wisdom.
  • Start shifting from "how do I configure it?" to "why this design?" — the design thinking that leads to CCDE and Level 5.
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