Chapter 2 Internetworking
Chapter 2 Internetworking
Chapter 2 Internetworking
It-arun Computer
Engineering Dept, RMUTT.
INTERNETWORKING
Chapter 2
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TOPIC
Internetworking Basics
Internetworking Model
Ethernet Networking
Wireless Networking
Data Encapsulation
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INTERNETWORK BASIC
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POSSIBLE CAUSES OF LAN TRAFFIC
CONGESTION ARE
Low bandwidth
Broadcast domain
Collision domain
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TWO ADVANTAGES OF USING
ROUTERS IN YOUR NETWORK ARE
They don’t forward broadcasts by default.
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FOUR ROUTER FUNCTIONS IN YOUR
NETWORK CAN BE LISTED AS
Packet switching
Packet filtering
Path selection
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INTERNETWORKING MODEL
The Layered Approach
Advantages of Reference Models
It divides the network communication process into
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THE OSI REFERENCE MODEL
The upper layers
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THE LOWER LAYERS
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LAYER FUNCTIONS
INTERFACES: VERTICAL (ADJACENT
LAYER) COMMUNICATION
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PROTOCOLS: HORIZONTAL
(CORRESPONDING LAYER) COMMUNICATION
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DATA ENCAPSULATION
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TCP/IP PROTOCOLS
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TCP/IP PROTOCOLS
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PROTOCOL DATA UNITS (PDUS) AND
SERVICE DATA UNITS (SDUS)
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INDIRECT DEVICE CONNECTION AND
MESSAGE ROUTING
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APPLICATION LAYER
The Application layer of the OSI model marks the
spot where users actually communicate to the
computer.
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THE PRESENTATION LAYER
It presents data to the Application layer and is
responsible for data translation and code
formatting.
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THE SESSION LAYER
The Session layer is responsible for setting
up, managing, and then tearing down
sessions between Presentation layer
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The Transport layer is responsible for providing
mechanisms for multiplexing upper-layer
applications, establishing sessions, and tearing
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FLOW CONTROL
Data integrity is ensured at the Transport
layer by maintaining flow control and by
allowing users to request reliable data
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THE DATA LINK LAYER
The Data Link layer provides the physical
transmission of the data and handles error
notification, network topology, and flow control.
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DATA LINK LAYER WITH THE ETHERNET
AND IEEE SPECIFICATIONS.
THE IEEE ETHERNET DATA LINK
LAYER HAS TWO SUBLAYERS:
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SWITCHES AND BRIDGES AT THE DATA
LINK LAYER
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THE PHYSICAL LAYER
we find that the Physical layer does two things: It
sends bits and receives bits. Bits come only in
values of 1 or 0—a Morse code with numerical
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ETHERNET NETWORKING
Lecture 2-2
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THE SUCCESS OF ETHERNET IS DUE
TO THE FOLLOWING FACTORS:
Simplicity and ease of maintenance
Ability to incorporate new technologies
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802.3 ETHERNET IN RELATION TO THE
OSI MODEL
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IEEE 802.X STANDARDS
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ETHERNET TECHNOLOGIES MAPPED TO THE
OSI MODEL
ETHERNET ADDRESSING
We get into how Ethernet addressing
works. It uses the Media Access Control
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MAC ADDRESS FORMAT
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GENERIC FRAME FORMAT
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IEEE 802.3
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ETHERNET II FRAME FORMAT
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ETHERNET II AND IEEE 802.3 FRAME
FORMAT
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MEDIA ACCESS CONTROL (MAC)
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MAC RULES AND COLLISION
DETECTION/BACKOFF
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MAC RULES AND COLLISION
DETECTION/BACKOFF
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ETHERNET TIMING
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INTERFRAME SPACING
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BACKOFF
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ERROR HANDLING
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TYPES OF COLLISIONS
THE EFFECTS OF HAVING A CSMA/CD NETWORK
SUSTAINING HEAVY COLLISIONS INCLUDE
Delay
Low throughput
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ETHERNET ERRORS
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ETHERNET ERRORS
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FCS ERRORS
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PARAMETERS FOR 10 MBPS
ETHERNET OPERATION
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MANCHESTER ENCODING EXAMPLES
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PARAMETERS FOR 100-MBPS ETHERNET
OPERATION
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MLT-3 ENCODING EXAMPLE (100BASE-
TX)
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NRZI ENCODING EXAMPLES (100BASE-
FX)
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PARAMETERS FOR GIGABIT
ETHERNET OPERATION
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ACTUAL 1000BASE-T SIGNAL
TRANSMISSION
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GIGABIT ETHERNET LAYERS
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GIGABIT ETHERNET MEDIA COMPARISON
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PARAMETERS FOR 10-GBPS ETHERNET
OPERATION
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10GBASE LX-4 SIGNAL
MULTIPLEXING
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WIRELESS NETWORKING
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BENEFITS OF WLANS
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EVOLUTION OF WIRELESS LANS
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UNLICENSED FREQUENCY BANDS
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WIRELESS TECHNOLOGIES
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DISTANCE VERSUS SPEED
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WIRELESS TECHNOLOGIES
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IN-BUILDING WLANS
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THE IEEE 802 STANDARDS
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IEEE 802.11 PROTOCOLS
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IEEE 802.11 STANDARDS
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DATA ENCAPSULATION
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DATA ENCAPSULATION
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SUMMARY
OSI model—the seven-layer model used to help application
developers design applications that can run on any type of
system or network. Each layer has its special jobs and
select responsibilities within the model to ensure that solid,
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