Internetworking - University of Maine System
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Transcript Internetworking - University of Maine System
Internetworking
Lecture 10
October 23, 2000
Introduction to Internetworking
So far, we’ve discussed about how a single
network functions.
Internetworking is how multiple networks are
connected.
All material from here relates to “the big
picture.”
Why Internetworking?
Each network has its own specific task.
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LAN functionality
WAN functionality
Internetworking is a culmination of multiple,
independent networks being developed.
In another light, internetworking is the glue
behind the Internet.
Universal Service
Universal Service is the concept that any
device on any network can communicate with
any arbitrary device on another network.
The Internet is a heterogeneous environment,
with multiple, independent network topologies.
In LANs, we have seen that heterogeneous
technologies cannot interconnect without the
help of a device to translate from one medium
to another.
Internetworking
The interconnects between different networks
are a combination of hardware and software
elements.
Routers provide the proper hardware/software
translation to connect two different networks
together.
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LAN routers
WAN routers
The Router
The router is very similar to a bridge.
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Memory
CPU
Separate I/O ports for each network topology
The Router (cont.)
The router can perform multiple tasks
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LAN / LAN routing
WAN / WAN routing
LAN / WAN routing
The clouds in each picture can represent a
different network topology (FDDI, Ethernet),
address scheme (IP, IPX), or both!
Internet Architecture
The book likes to use the cloud diagram:
I Like This Diagram
Why the Later is Realistic
Rarely do you have a “linear” network!
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Inefficient transport
Bandwidth limitations in the “middle”
A Universal Service goal not only dictates if
you can talk to another machine, but how fast!
Reliability
Capacity
Cost
Internet as a Virtual Network
Internetworking and TCP/IP
ARPANet
NSFNet
TCP/IP
TCP/IP Layers
These are not hard and
fast rules. Many different
models exist.
Layer 1: Physical
Layer 2: Network
Interface
Layer 3: Internet
Layer 4: Transport
Layer 5: Application
TCP/IP & ISO Model
Application (Layers 6
and 7 in ISO model)
Transport (Layer 4 in
ISO model)
Internet (Layer 3 in ISO)
Network Interface (Layer
2 in ISO)
Physical (Layer 1 in ISO)