4-network_components
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Transcript 4-network_components
Network Components
Two
basic components to the BN
hardware
devices that connect the networks to the
backbone
hubs
bridges
switches
routers
brouters
gateways
network
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Hubs
very
simple devices that pass all traffic in both
directions between the LAN sections they link
same or different cable types
use physical layer protocols
pass on every message
used to connect LANs of similar technology, or to
extend the distance of one LAN
can be called repeaters or amplifiers
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HUB Devices
Repeater/Amplifier
HUB (MAU)
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Hubs
inexpensive
easy
to Install
can connect different media
very little delay
limited
distance between devices
limited on the number of repeaters
no protocol or rate conversion
no error detection
does not filter
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Bridges
connect
two LAN segments that use the same data
link and network protocol
operated at the data link layer
same or different cable types
forward only those messages that need to go out
(filtering)
“learn” whether to forward packets
internal routing table
combination of “black box” hardware and software
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Bridges
There are three types of bridges:
Simple bridge
Learning bridge
Multiport bridge
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Bridges Interconnecting
Bridge
Repeater/
Amplifier
Repeater/
Amplifier
HUB (MAU)
HUB (MAU)
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Bridges
may
be different data rates and different media easy
to Install
no modifications required to the communications
software
can learn the ports for data transmission
understand
only data link layer protocols and
addresses
no protocol conversion
broadcasts when it does not know the address
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Switches
connect
more than two LAN segments that use
the same data link and network protocol.
operate at the data link layer
same or different type cable
ports are usually provided for 4, 8, 16, or 32 LAN
segments
ports are used simultaneously
connect lower speed segments to high speed BN
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Switches
Cut-through
switches
use
circuit-switching to immediately connect the port
with the incoming message to the correct outgoing
port
very fast as decisions are done in hardware
outgoing packet is lost if port is in use
Store-and-forward
switches
copy
the incoming packet to memory prior to
processing the destination address -- transmit it when
the outgoing port is ready
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Switches Interconnecting
Wing A
Wing B
First Floor Switch
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Wing C
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Wing C
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Switches
much
more sophisticated than previously
enable all ports to work at the same time
can convert protocols
configurable
high speed
understand
only data link layer protocols and
addresses
much more expensive then previous options
higher maintenance
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Routers
connect
two or more LANs that use the same or
different data link protocols, but the same network
protocol.
same or different cable types
operate at the network layer
forward only messages that need to go out
routers use the internetwork address
internal routing tables
only processes messages addressed to it
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Routers
choose
the best route to send the packet (path)
IDs
of other networks
paths to the networks
relative efficiency of the paths
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Routers
The
router must deal with network differences:
addressing
schemes
minimum packet size
interfaces
reliability
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Routers Interconnecting
Router
\
X.25 Network
the “cloud”
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Token Ring
LAN1
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Ethernet
LAN2
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Routers
can
mix-in-match protocols and convert them
enable all ports to work at the same time
can be used as an extra layer of security
configurable
high speed
hard
to configure and manage
access lists must be kept current
high maintenance/high training costs
very expensive
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Brouters
devices
that combine the functions of both bridges
and routers
operate at both the data link and network layers
same or different data link protocol
same network protocol
as fast as bridges for same data link type networks
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Gateways
complex
machines that are interfaces between two or
more dissimilar networks
connect two or more LANs that use the same or
different data link layer, network layer, and cable types
operates at the network layer (3) or higher layers (4-7)
forwards only those messages that need to go out
a combination of both hardware and software
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Gateways
translates
one network protocol to another
translates data formats
translates open sessions between application
programs
translates to mainframes
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Gateways
Exists
in four major types:
LAN-to-IBM
mainframe
Network-to-network
System-to-network
System-to-system
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LAN-to-IBM Mainframe
Allow
LANs using TCP/IP and Ethernet to be
connected to IBM mainframe using SNA
Eliminates the need for each PC on the LAN to
have SNA hardware/software that makes it act
like an IBM 3270 terminal
Mainframe
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Network-to-Network
X.75 Gateway
X.25 \Network
A
X.25 Network
\
B
X.75 provides terminal
address translation
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System-to-Network
Gateway
X.25 \Network
Minicomputer or
Microcomputer
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System-to-System
allows
connecting one vendor’s architecture to
another vendor’s architecture
allows both the existence of OSI-based and
proprietary architectures (like SNA or AppleTalk)
gives management to tools necessary to plan a
gradual migration to a completely OSI environment
applications can work with other application
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System-to-System
Profs E-mail Gateway
\
X.25 Network
LAN E-mail Server
Profs E-mail
LAN E-mail Gateway
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Backbone Network Devices
Physical Data Link Network
Layer
Layer Layer
Device
Operates at
Messages
Hub
Bridge
Physical
Data link
S/D
S/D
Same Same
Same Same
Switch
Data link
S/D
Same Same
Router
Network
S/D
S/D
Same
Brouter
Data link &
Network
Network
All transferred
Filtered using
data link layer add.
Switched using
data link layer add.
Routed using
network layer add.
Filtered & routed
S/D
S/D
Same
Routed using
network layer add.
S/D
S/D
S/D
Gateway
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Terminology Warnings
Multiprotocol
bridges translate between different data
link layer protocols.
Multiprotocol routers translate between different
network layer protocols.
Protocol filtering bridges forward only packets of a
certain type, i.e., token-ring or ethernet
Encapsulating bridges connect networks with different
data link protocols, encapsulating messages with
correct protocol for transmission
Layer-3 switches (IP switches) - can also switch
messages based on their network layer address
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Shared Media Technologies
Fast
Ethernet
Fast Token Ring
Fiber Distributed Data Interface
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Fast Ethernet
100Base-X
Ethernet
100VG-AnyLAN
Gigabit Ethernet
Iso-ENET (isochronous ethernet)
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100Base-X Ethernet
IEEE
802.13
identical to 10Base-T Ethernet
three data link layer protocols
100 Mbps data rate
standard ethernet bus topology
ethernet data link packets
ethernet CSMA/CD media access protocol
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100Base-X Ethernet
Three versions of 100Base-X Ethernet
100Base-TX
100Base-FX
100Base-T4
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100VG-AnyLAN
IEEE
802.12
both Ethernet or token-ring
Demand Priority Access Method (DPAM)
polling
polls
each computer to see if it has data to send
can use a priority system (notification system)
four
sets of twisted pair running at 25 Mbps
faster than 100Base-T
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Gigabit Ethernet
IEEE
802.3Z
1000Base-X
1000 Mbps (1000 Mbps = 1 Gbps)
high speed of transmission may cause
collisions to go undetected
mainly used for point-to-point full-duplex
communication links (BN, MAN)
PCs send or receive data at rates up to 100
Mbps
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Gigabit Ethernet
Four versions of 1000Base-X Ethernet
1000
Base-LX (fiber up to 440 meters)
1000 Base-SX (fiber up to 260 meters)
1000 Base-T (four pairs twisted-pair up to 100
meters)
1000 Base-CX (one cat 5 cable up to 24 meters)
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Iso-ENET
IEEE
802.9A
isochronous Ethernet
standard 10Base-T Ethernet + 6.144 Mbps
both transmitted on the same twisted pair
6.144 circuit configured for ISDN for
transmission of voice and video
mainly used for desktop videoconferencing
and multimedia products
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Improving Circuit Capacity
How much bandwidth to expect
LAN Type
Ethernet
Token Ring
Fast Ethernet
Faster Ethernet
Fast Token Ring
FDDI
ATM
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Speed
10 Mbps
16 Mbps
100 Mbps
1 Gbps
100 Mbps
100 Mbps
2.4 Gbps
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Selecting a Backbone Network
5 important factors to consider:
Throughput
Network cost
Type of application
Ease of network management
Compatibility with current and future
technologies
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