Introduction

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Transcript Introduction

Chapter One
Introduction to Computer
Networks and Data
Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Introduction
• Who today has not used a computer network?
• Mass transit, interstate highways, 24-hour bankers,
grocery stores, cable television, cellphones,
businesses and schools, and retail outlets support
some form of computer network
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
The Language of Computer Networks
• Computer network – an interconnection of computers
and computing equipment using either wires or radio
waves over small or large geographic areas
• Local area network – networks that are small in
geographic size spanning a room, floor, building, or
campus
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
The Language of Computer Networks
• Metropolitan area network – networks that serve an
area of 1 to 30 miles, approximately the size of a
typical city
• Wide area network – a large network that
encompasses (‫)تشمل‬parts of states, multiple states,
countries, and the world
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
The Language of Computer Networks
• Personal area network – a network of a few meters,
between wireless devices such as PDAs, laptops, and
similar devices
• Voice network – a network that transmits telephone
signals
• Data network – a network that transmits computer
data
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
The Language of Computer Networks
• Data communications – the transfer of digital or
analog data using digital or analog signals
• Telecommunications – the study of telephones and
the systems that transmit telephone signals
• Network management – the design, installation, and
support of a network, including its hardware and
software
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
The Big Picture
• Networks are composed of many devices, including:
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Workstations (computers, telephones)
Servers
Network hubs and switches (bridges)
Routers (LAN to WAN and WAN to WAN)
Telephone switching gear
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Workstations, which are personal computers or microcomputers where
users reside
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Servers, which are the computers that store network software and shared or
private user files
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Hubs, which are the collection points for the wires that interconnect the
workstations
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Switches, which are more advanced devices that are replacing hubs and
are capable of filtering out unnecessary traffic
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Routers, which are the connecting devices between local area networks and
wide area networks
Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Computer Networks – Basic Connections
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Computer terminal / microcomputer to mainframe
Microcomputer to local area network
Microcomputer to Internet
Local area network to local area network
Personal area network to workstation
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Computer Networks – Basic Connections
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Local area network to metropolitan area network
Local area network to wide area network
Sensor to local area network
Satellite and microwave
Wireless telephone and wired telephone to network
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Computer Terminal /
Microcomputer to Mainframe Computer
• Predominant form in the 1960s and 1970s
• Still used in many types of businesses for data entry
and data retrieval
• Usually involves a low-speed connection
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Microcomputer to
Local Area Network
• Highly common throughout business and academic
environments, and now homes
• Typically a medium- to high-speed connection
• Computer (device) requires a NIC (network interface
card)
• NIC connects to a hub-like device
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Microcomputer to
Internet
• Popular with home users and small businesses
• Often a dial-up modem is used to connect user’s
microcomputer to an Internet service provider
• Technologies such as DSL(Digital subscriber line) and
cable modems are replacing modems
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Local Area Network
to Local Area Network
• Found in systems that have two or more LANs and a
need for them to intercommunicate
• A bridge-like device (such as a switch) is typically
used to interconnect LANs
• Switch can filter frames
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Personal Area
Network to Workstation
• Interconnects wireless devices such as PDAs (personal
digital assistant ), laptops and notebooks, and music
playback devices.
• Used over short distances such as a few meters
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Local Area Network
to Metropolitan Area Network
• Used to interconnect companies (usually their local
area networks) to networks that encompass a city
• High-speed networks with redundant circuits
• Metro Ethernet is latest form of metropolitan LAN
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Local Area Network
to Wide Area Network
• One of the most common ways to interconnect a user
on a LAN workstation to the Internet (a wide area
network)
• A router is the typical device that performs LAN to
WAN connections
• Routers are more complex devices than switches
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Wide Area Network
to Wide Area Network
• High-speed routers and switches are used to connect
one wide area network to another
• Thousands of wide area networks across North
America, many interconnected via these routers and
switches
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Sensor to Local Area
Network
• Not all local area networks deal with microcomputer
workstations
• Often found in industrial and laboratory environments
• Assembly lines and robotic controls depend heavily
on sensor-based local area networks
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Satellite and
Microwave
• Typically long distance wireless connections
• Many types of applications including long distance
telephone, television, radio, long-haul (‫لمسافات طويلة‬
) data transfers, and wireless data services
• Typically expensive services but many companies
offer competitive services and rates
• Newer shorter-distance services such as Wi-Max
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Basic Connections – Wireless or Cellular
Telephones
• Constantly expanding market across the U.S. and
world
• Third generation services available in many areas and
under many types of plans
• Newest generation includes higher speed data
transfers (100s of kilobits per second)
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
An Additional Basic Connection –
Telephone to Network
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Telephone systems are ubiquitous(‫ )في كل مكان‬and now carry more data than voice
Common configuration – telephone connected to POTS (Plain old telephone service )
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Plain old telephone service (POTS) is an analog telephone service implemented over copper
twisted pair wires and based on the Bell Telephone system.
Newer configuration (VoIP) – telephone to LAN via gateway or telephone to
gateway via DSL/cable
– VoIP refers to a way to carry phone calls over an IP data network, whether on
the Internet or your own internal network. A primary attraction of VoIP is its ability
to help reduce expenses because telephone calls travel over the data network
rather than the phone company's network.
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Network Architectures
• A reference model that describes the layers of
hardware and software necessary to transmit data
between two points or for multiple devices /
applications to interoperate(‫) تتفاعل‬
• Reference models are necessary to increase
likelihood(‫ ) احتمال‬that different components from
different manufacturers will converse(‫) التخاطب‬
• Two models to learn: OSI model and TCP/IP protocol
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Network Architectures
• The OSI model’s seven layers:
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Network Architectures
• The TCP/IP protocol suite
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Network Architectures – TCP/IP
• Application layer – equivalent to OSI’s application
and presentation layers
• Transport layer – equivalent to OSI’s transport layer
• Network (Internet or internetwork) layer – equivalent
to OSI’s network layer
• Network access (data link/physical) layer –
equivalent to OSI’s data link and physical layers
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
Network Architectures
• Logical and physical connections – A logical
connection is one that exists only in the software,
while a physical connection is one that exists in the
hardware
• Note that in a network architecture, only the lowest
layer contains the physical connection, while are
higher layers contain logical connections
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
• Logical and physical connections
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
• Example of data flow through layers
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Chapter One - Introduction to Computer
Networks And Data Communications
• Network connections in action
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