Overview of Computer Netwotk
Overview of Computer Netwotk
Overview of Computer Netwotk
Overview of Computer
Netwotk
1.1
1-1 NETWORKS
1.2
Figure 1.3 Types of connections: point-to-point and multipoint
1.3
1-1 NETWORK TOPOPOGY
1.4
Figure 1.4 Categories of topology
1.5
Figure 1.5 A fully connected mesh topology (five devices)
1.6
Figure 1.6 A star topology connecting four stations
1.7
Figure 1.7 A bus topology connecting three stations
1.8
Figure 1.8 A ring topology connecting six stations
1.9
Figure 1.9 A hybrid topology: a star backbone with three bus networks
1.10
1-1 NETWORK CATEGORIES
1.11
Note
1.12
Figure 1.10 An isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a closet
1.13
Note
1.14
Figure 1.11 WANs: a switched WAN and a point-to-point WAN
1.15
Figure 1.12 A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LANs
1.16
Note
1.17
Figure 1.12 An access point connect various devices to the network
1.18
1-3 THE INTERNET
1.19
Note
1.20
Figure 1.13 Hierarchical organization of the Internet
1.21
1-4 NETWORK DEVICES
1.22
POPULAR NETWORK DEVICES
Popular network devices includes:
1. NIC
2. Repeater
3. Hub
4. Bridge
5. Switch
6. Router
7. Modem
8. Gateway
1.23
Figure 1.: NIC card connect computers to the network
1.24
Figure 1. Hubs connect computers together in a star
topology network.
1.25
Figure 1. A repeater is an electronic device that
receives a signal and retransmits it at a higher
level and/or higher power, or onto the other side
of an obstruction, so that the signal can cover
longer distances without degradation.
1.26
Figure 1. Bridges have intelligence and can "bridge" two
of their ports together at very high speed. They use a
database of MAC addresses to determine where computers
are located and very efficiently send frames only where
they need to go.
1.27
Figure 1. Switches provide a central connection between two or
more computers on a network, but with some intelligence.
They provide traffic control for packets; rather than forwarding
data to all the connected ports, a switch forwards data only
to the port on which the destination system is connected..
1.28
Figure 1. Routers operate at the network layer of the
OSI model and efficiently route
information between Local Area Networks.
1.29
Figure 1. A modem (modulator–demodulator) is a network
Hardware device that modulates one or more carrier wave
signals to encode digital information for transmission and
demodulates signals to decode the transmitted information.
The goal is to produce a signal that can be transmitted
easily and decoded to reproduce the original digital data.
1.30