Transcript Network6
Chapter 6 Remote Access
and Communication Links
6.1
6.2
Remote Access to a LAN
Modem Dial-up
Virtual Private Network
Communication Links
PSTN
ISDN
T1/T3
DSL
Cable TV network
ATM
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1 Remote Access to a LAN
Remote Access means
accessing a LAN by mobile/home users
Two means:
modem dial-up
VPN
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
Modem dial-up means
connection using ordinary phone lines
also called
Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS)
Both the remote user and the LAN must have
a registered phone number
Remote Access Service (RAS)
of the server
must be activated
RAS client program
needed by the user
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
A. Modem (1/2)
Modem
converts between
digital
• computer
analog
• phone line
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
A. Modem (1/2)
Modem (cont’)
Modulation means
the amplitude (or frequency) of analog signal is changed
according to data
sender modem modulates data
Demodulation means
getting data from a modulated signal
receiver modem demodulates the analog signals
Modems are needed at both ends
for several remote users, a pool of modems are needed
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
B. Quality
Quality is poor
error-rate can be as high as 40%
because PSTN was designed for voice communication
Re-transmission is quite often
Note: poor quality does NOT mean that data received are
inaccurate!
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
C. Bandwidth
Maximum bandwidth of PSTN is 56 Kbps
Modems negotiate the highest possible transmission rate
If one modem is 56 Kbps, but the other is 14.4 Kbps,
the highest transmission rate is only 14.4 Kbps.
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
D. Dial-up
Dial-up is necessary (for standard line, not leased line)
the connection is not permanent
known as “dial-on-demand”
Opposite is “always-on connection”
e.g. DSL broadband
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
E. Leased line
Leased line means
line reserved and dedicated for transmission
“Always-on connection”
higher quality
less error rate
bandwidth can be guaranteed
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
F. Security
Security is low
data transmitted using RAS over PSTN are usually not
encrypted
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.1 Modem Dial-up
G. Cost
Cost is
Low for local connections
High for long-distance phone line
In summary, PSTN is
slow
poor in transmission quality
needs dial-up
has security risk
ubiquitous : easy to access
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.2 Virtual Private Network (VPN) (1/3)
Virtual Private Network (VPN)
remote access to a LAN
over the Internet
with security using tunnels
Tunnel
virtual dedicated channel, with following characteristics:
A. Encryption
even encrypted data are intercepted, confidentiality can be
guaranteed
B. Authentication
Access control is implemented, such as login
C. Message integrity
Prevent message alteration.
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.2 Virtual Private Network (VPN) (2/3)
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.1.2 Virtual Private Network (VPN) (3/3)
IPSec (IP security)
industrial technique in VPN
e.g. In Windows:
PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol)
L2TP (Layer Two Tunneling Protocol)
VPN server
installed in the LAN
VPN client
installed by user
VPN is in widespread use today
e.g. access intranet from home, or
connecting LANs to form extranets
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2 Communication Links
Recall: MAN or WAN is constructed by connecting LANs
by routers and long-distance communication links.
Long-distance communication media include:
Copper wire
Fiber-optic cable
Radio waves
Satellite links
For copper wire, WAN technologies include
ordinary phone line, ISDN, T1, T3, DSL, cable TV network
and ATM.
The choice depends on
speed, reliability, cost, availability and security.
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.1 PSTN
Ordinary phone line (PSTN)
is the slowest method of establishing a communication
link.
but, it has highest availability
most easy to access
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.2 ISDN
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
dedicated digital communication link
bandwidth 64 Kbps
provided by telephone companies
but better quality than the analog telephone system
error rate less than 1%
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.3 T1 and T3
T1
dedicated digital communication link
bandwidth 1.5 Mbps
multiplexing 24 separate 64 Kbps channels
expensive
T3
bandwidth 44.7 Mbps
multiplexing 672 separate 64 Kbps channels
very expensive
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.4 DSL (1/3)
Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
makes use of ordinary phone lines
plus advanced technology
broadband
much higher bandwidth than PSTN
inexpensive
Originally, the copper wire of PSTN is capable of carrying signals of very high
frequency up to 1 MHz. But, the interface cards installed in the central office of the
telephone company limit the frequency to 4 KHz only. DSL opens up the maximum
capability by simply replacing the old interface cards in the central office of the
telephone companies.
There are several versions of DSL: ADSL, HDSL, SDSL and VDSL, where the first
letters in the acronyms are Asymmetric, High-data-rate, Symmetric and Very-highdata-rate respectively. The most popular version is ADSL.
Asymmetric DSL (ADSL) has a higher download speed than upload speed, for
example, 6 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload.
ADSL can reserve a small proportion (8 KHz) of total bandwidth for voice signals.
Therefore, ADSL is able to transmit both data and voice at the same time. An ADSL
modem is necessary.
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.4 DSL (2/3)
Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
broadband technology
makes use of ordinary phone lines
much higher bandwidth than PSTN
inexpensive
need DSL modem
Several versions:
ADSL - Asymmetric (most popular)
higher download speed than upload speed
e.g. 6 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload
HDSL - High-data-rate
SDSL - Symmetric
VDSL - Very-high-data-rate
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.4 DSL (3/3)
DSL can transmit voice and data at the same time
a small proportion (8 KHz) of total bandwidth can be
reserved for voice signals
What is technology in DSL?
Originally, PSTN can carry signals up to 1 MHz
But, the telephone company limits to 4 KHz for voice
So, simply replace the equipment, and the old phone lines
can have bandwidth up to 10 Mbps
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.5 Cable TV Network
Cable TV network
another broadband technology
coaxial cables
bandwidth as high as 10 Mbps
needs: cable modem
can transmit data and television signals at the same time
Chapter 6 Communication Links
6.2.6 ATM
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
very high-speed
expensive
each packet has a fixed length (53 bytes)
no need to check the end of data for each packet
multiplexed to fully utilize the network resources
media include
coaxial cable, twisted-pair, fiber-optic cables.
bandwidth: 155 Mbps to 622 Mbps