The Basics Primary Function of a LAN File serving large storage disk drive acts as a central storage repository Print serving Providing authorization to access a particular printer accept and queue print jobs and user access to print queue to perform administrative duties ID: 675883
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Slide1
Chapter 7
Local Area Networks:
The BasicsSlide2
Primary Function of a LAN
File serving – large storage disk drive acts as a central storage repository
Print serving – Providing authorization to access a particular printer, accept and queue print jobs, and user access to print queue to perform administrative duties
Video transfers – High speed LANs are capable of supporting video image and live video transfers
Manufacturing support – LANs can support manufacturing and industrial environments
Academic support – In classrooms, labs, and wireless
E-mail support
Interconnection between multiple systemsSlide3
Advantages of LAN
Ability to share hardware and software resources
Individual workstation might survive network failure
Component and system evolution are possible
Support for heterogeneous forms of hardware and software
Access to other LANs and WANs
Private ownership
Secure transfers at high speeds with low error ratesSlide4
Disadvantages of LAN
Equipment and support can be costly
Level of maintenance continues to grow
Private ownership?
Some types of hardware may not interoperate
Just because a LAN can support two different kinds of packages does not mean their data can interchange easily
A LAN is only as strong as it weakest link, and there are many linksSlide5
Basic LAN Topologies
Bus/tree
Star-wired bus
Star-wired ring
WirelessSlide6
Bus/Tree Topology
The original topology.
Workstation has a network interface card (NIC) that attaches to the bus (a coaxial cable) via a tap.
Data can be transferred using either baseband digital signals or broadband analog signals.
Baseband signals are bidirectional (broadcast) and move outward in both directions from the workstation transmitting.
Broadband signals are usually uni-directional and transmit in only one direction. Because of this, special wiring considerations are necessary.
Buses can be split and joined, creating trees.Slide7
Baseband
Broadband
7Slide8
Star-wired Bus Topology
Logically operates as a bus, but physically looks like a star
Star design is based on hub. All workstations attach to hub
Unshielded twisted pair usually used to connect workstation to hub
Hub takes incoming signal and immediately broadcasts it out all connected links
Hubs can be interconnected to extend network size
Modular connectors and twisted pair make installation and maintenance of star-wired bus better than standard bus
Hubs can be interconnected with twisted pair, coaxial cable, or fiber optic cable
Biggest disadvantage: when one station talks, everyone hears it. This is called a shared network. All devices are sharing the network mediumSlide9
9Slide10
Star-wired Ring Topology
Logically operates as a ring but physically appears as a star
Based on MAU (multi-station access unit) which functions similarly to a hub
Where a hub immediately broadcasts all incoming signals onto all connected links, the MAU passes the signal around in a ring fashion
Like hubs, MAUs can be interconnected to increase network sizeSlide11
11Slide12
Wireless LANs (I)
Not really a specific topology
Workstation in wireless LAN can be anywhere as long as within transmitting distance to access point
Several versions of IEEE 802.11 standard defines various forms of wireless LAN connections
Two basic components necessary:
Client Radio - usually PC card with integrated antenna installed in a laptop or workstation
Access Point (AP) - Ethernet port plus transceiver
AP acts as bridge between wired and wireless networks
Can perform basic routing functions
Single-cell -
Workstations reside within a basic service set
Multiple-cell -
Multiple basic service sets create an extended service set
Ad-hoc -
Wireless LANs configured without access pointSlide13
13Slide14
Wireless LANs (II)
IEEE 802.11 – The original wireless standard, transmitting data at 2 Mbps
IEEE 802.11b – The second wireless standard, transmitting data at 11 Mbps
IEEE
802.11a – One of the more recent standards, transmitting data at 54 Mbps using 5 GHz frequency range
IEEE 802.11g – The other recent standard, also transmitting data at 54 Mbps but using the same frequencies as 802.11b (2.4 GHz)
Backwards compatible with 802.11b
IEEE 802.11n (100 Mbps) is
last
standard that has been widely implemented.
Available at both 2.4 & 5 GHz
Latest wireless Ethernet is using MIMO technology (multiple input multiple output)
Sender and receiver have multiple antennas for optimum
reception
IEEE 802.11ac is the latest standard that is gaining momentumOperates only on 5 GHz band with data rate up to 6.9 GbpsSlide15
15Slide16
Medium Access Control Protocols
How does a workstation get its data onto the LAN medium?
Medium access control protocol - software that allows workstations to “take turns” at transmitting data
Two basic categories:
Contention-based protocols
Round robin protocolsSlide17
Contention-Based Protocols (I)
Essentially first come first served
Most common example:
Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD)
If no one is transmitting, a workstation can transmit
If someone else is transmitting, workstation “backs off” and waits
If two workstations transmit at same time, collision occurs
When two workstations hear collision, they stop transmitting immediately
Each workstation backs off a random amount of time and tries again
Hopefully, both workstations do not try again at exact same time
CSMA/CD is an example of a nondeterministic protocolSlide18
18Slide19
Contention-Based Protocols (II)
Wireless CSMA/CA (Collision avoidance)
Protocol does not listen and detect collisions
Instead, tries to avoid collisions before they happen
How does CSMA/CA do this?
All devices, before they transmit, must wait an amount of time called an
interframe
space (IFS)
Some applications have a short IFS, while others have a long IFS
If two applications want to transmit at same time, the application with shorter IFS will go first. If medium is idle after IFS, a random
backoff
counter is selected and transmission starts after the countdown.Slide20
Round Robin Protocols
Each workstation takes turn transmitting: turn is passed around the network from workstation to workstation
Most common example is token ring LAN in which a software token is passed from workstation to workstation
Token ring is an example of a deterministic protocol
Token ring more complex than CSMA/CD
What happens if token is lost? Duplicated? Hogged?
Token ring LANs are losing the battle with CSMA/CD LANsSlide21
21Slide22
IEEE 802
To better support local area networks, data link layer of the OSI model was broken into two sublayers:
Logical link control sublayer
Medium access control sublayer
Medium access control sublayer defines the frame layout
More closely tied to specific medium at physical layer
Thus, when people refer to LANs they often refer to its MAC sublayer name, such as 10BaseTSlide23
IEEE 802 Frame Formats
IEEE 802 suite of protocols defines frame formats for CSMA/CD (IEEE 802.3), CSMA/CA (IEEE 802.11), and token ring (IEEE 802.5)
Each frame format describes how data package is formed
If a CSMA/CD network connects to a token ring network, frames have to be converted from one to anotherSlide24
Frame Formats
IEEE 802.5 Token Ring
IEEE
802.11 CSMA/CA
IEEE 802.3 CSMA/CDSlide25
LAN Systems
Ethernet or CSMA/CD
IBM Token Ring
FDDI (Fiber Distributed Data Interface)Slide26
Ethernet
Originally, CSMA/CD was 10 Mbps.
Then 100 Mbps was introduced. Most NICs sold today are 10/100 Mbps.
Then 1000 Mbps (1
Gbps
) was introduced.
Transmission is full duplex (separate transmit and receive), thus no collisions.
Prioritization is possible using 802.1p protocol.
Topology can be star or mesh (for trunks).
Cabling can be either UTP or optical.
Where 10 Mbps Ethernet has less than 30% utilization due to collisions, 1000 Mbps is limited only by traffic queuing.
Distance with 10 Mbps is limited by CSMA/CD propagation time, whereas 1000 Mbps is limited only by media.
10
Gbps
is now beginning to appear.Slide27
27Slide28
Power & Ethernet
What if you have a remote device that has an Ethernet connection?
It will require a power connection
What if you don’t have an electrical outlet nearby?
Use PoE
Power to drive Ethernet NIC is sent over wiring along with usual Ethernet signals
Ethernet over power line
Uses existing power lines in the building
No new wiring needed
SlowerSlide29
IBM Token Ring
Deterministic LAN offered at speeds of 4, 16 and 100 Mbps.
Very good throughput under heavy loads.
More expensive components than CSMA/CD.
Losing ground quickly to CSMA/CD. May be extinct soon.Slide30
FDDI
Based on the token ring design using 100 Mbps fiber connections.
Allows for two concentric rings - inner ring can support data travel in opposite direction or work as backup.
Token is attached to the outgoing packet, rather than waiting for the outgoing packet to circle the entire ring.Slide31
Interconnection
Necessary to connect a local area network to another local area network or to a wide area network.
LAN-to-LAN connections are often performed with a bridge-like device.
LAN-to-WAN connections are usually performed with a router.
A switch can be used to interconnect segments of a local area network.Slide32
Why Segment or Interconnect?
To separate / connect one corporate division with another
To connect two LANs with different protocols
To connect a LAN to the Internet
To break a LAN into segments to relieve traffic congestion
To provide a security wall between two different types of usersSlide33
Hubs
Interconnects two or more workstations into a local area network.
When a workstation transmits to a hub, the hub immediately resends the data frame out all connecting links.
A hub can be managed or unmanaged.
A managed hub possesses enough processing power that it can be managed from a remote location.Slide34
Hub issues
Maximum distance between devices (100m in 10Base-T)
Must avoid loops between connected hubs
message would circulate endlessly
Number of devices on network increases collision risks
collisions during peak traffic periods can crash the network (200 devices)Slide35
Bridges
Connect two similar LANs, such as two CSMA/CD LANs.
Connect two closely similar LANs, such as a CSMA/CD LAN and a token ring LAN.
Examines the destination address in a frame and either forwards this frame onto the next LAN or does not.
Examines the source address in a frame and places this address in a routing table, to be used for future routing decisions.Slide36
36Slide37
37Slide38
Transparent Bridge
Does not need programming but observes all traffic and builds routing tables from observation.
The observation is called backward learning.
Each bridge has two connections (ports) and there is a routing table associated with each port.
Observes each frame that arrives at a port, extracts the source address from the frame, and places that address in the port’s routing table.
Found with CSMA/CD LANs.
Can also convert one frame format to another.
Sometimes refereed to as a gateway or sometimes a router.
Removes the headers and trailers from one frame format and inserts (encapsulates) the headers and trailers for the second frame format.Slide39
39Slide40
Remote Bridge
Passing a data frame from one LAN to another when the two LANs are separated by a long distance and there is a wide area network connecting the two LANs.
Takes the frame before it leaves the first LAN and encapsulates the WAN headers and trailers.
When the packet arrives at the destination remote bridge, that bridge removes the WAN headers and trailers leaving the original frame.Slide41
Switches (I)
Combination of a hub and a bridge.
Can interconnect two or more workstations, but like a bridge, it observes traffic flow and learns.
When a frame arrives at a switch, the switch examines the destination address and forwards the frame out the one necessary connection.
Workstations that connect to a hub are on a shared segment.
Workstations that connect to a switch are on a switched segment.Slide42
Switches (II)
The
backplane
of a switch is fast enough to support multiple data transfers at one time.
A switch that employs
cut-through
architecture is passing on the frame before the entire frame has arrived at the switch.
Multiple workstations connected to a switch use dedicated segments.
This is a very efficient way to isolate heavy users from the network.
A switch can allow simultaneous access to multiple servers, or multiple simultaneous connections to a single server.
Using a pair of routers, it is possible to interconnect to switched segments, essentially creating one large local area networkSlide43
Virtual LANs
Logical subgroup within a LAN that is created via switches and software rather than by manually moving wiring from one network device to another
Even though employees and their actual computer workstations may be scattered throughout the building, LAN switches and VLAN software can be used to create a “network within a network”
A relatively new standard, IEEE 802.1Q, was designed to allow multiple devices to intercommunicate and work together to create a virtual LAN
Instead of sending technician to a wiring closet to move a workstation cable from one switch to another, an 802.1Q-compliant switch can be remotely configured by a network administratorSlide44
Full Duplex Switches
Allows for simultaneous transmission and reception of data to and from a workstation
This full duplex connection helps eliminate collisions
To support a full duplex connection to a switch, at least two pairs of wires are necessary
One for the receive operation
One for the transmit operation
Most people install four pairs today, so wiring is not problemSlide45
Link Aggregation
Combining multiple physical connection into one logical connection
Increase connection speed
Fault tolerance
IEEE 802.3ad-2000Slide46
Spanning Tree Algorithm
In large network, a loop can be created where a frame can circle through the network and back to the originating device
The spanning tree algorithm (used in Spanning Tree Protocol and now Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol) runs in switches and can identify loops and remove
them
Identify a switch as the root switch
Visit each switch and identify the one port
(RP) that
has the shortest path back to the root switch.
Visit
each LAN and identify the port
(DP) that
provides the shortest path back to the root switch
.
Mark the remaining unidentified ports
as Removed in the forwarding tables.Slide47
47Slide48
Quality of Service (
QoS
)
Set priority for each frame
The 802.1p adds a 3-bit field (PCP) to each Ethernet frame
PCP
Value
Traffic Type
0
Best
effort
1 Background (lowest priority) 2 Excellent effort 3 Critical applications 4 Video 5 Voice 6 Internetwork control
7 Network control (highest priority
)Slide49
Routers
Router - device that connects a LAN to a WAN or a WAN to a WAN
Router:
Accepts outgoing packet
Removes any LAN headers and trailers
Encapsulates necessary WAN
headers and trailers
Because router has to make wide area network routing decisions
Ú
router has to dig down into the network layer of the packet to retrieve network destination address
Routers are often called “layer 3 devices”
Operate at the third layer, or OSI network layer, of the packet
Often incorporate firewall functionsSlide50
50