Ethernet Frame PreambleDestination Address Source Address Length/ Type LLC/ Data Frame Check Sequence.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Network Devices Repeaters, hubs, bridges, switches, routers, NICs.
Advertisements

CCNA3: Switching Basics and Intermediate Routing v3.0 CISCO NETWORKING ACADEMY PROGRAM Switching Concepts Introduction to Ethernet/802.3 LANs Introduction.
Lab Practical 2 Study about different types of Networking Device
1 Version 3 Module 8 Ethernet Switching. 2 Version 3 Ethernet Switching Ethernet is a shared media –One node can transmit data at a time More nodes increases.
CCNA 3 v3.1 Module 4.
1 Version 3 Module 8 Ethernet Switching. 2 Version 3 Ethernet Switching Ethernet is a shared media –One node can transmit data at a time More nodes increases.
Nov-03 ©Cisco Systems CCNA Semester 1 Version 3 Comp11 Mod8 – St. Lawrence College – Cornwall Campus, ON, Canada – Clark slide 1 Cisco Systems CCNA Version.
1 K. Salah Module 4.0: Network Components Repeater Hub NIC Bridges Switches Routers VLANs.
Network Concepts. Networks LAN WAN Main Concepts n Protocol n Media n Topology.
Networking Hardware.
Chapter Six Networking Hardware.
1 25\10\2010 Unit-V Connecting LANs Unit – 5 Connecting DevicesConnecting Devices Backbone NetworksBackbone Networks Virtual LANsVirtual LANs.
© Wiley Inc All Rights Reserved. CCNA: Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide CHAPTER 1: Internetworking.
Routing ROUTING. Router A router is a device that determines the next network point to which a packet should be forwarded toward its destination Allow.
Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs
Data Network Connectivity 11. Objectives In this chapter, you will learn to: Explain how NICs operate List the most common types of NICs Describe the.
Chapter 11 Extending LANs: Fiber Modems, Repeaters, Bridges, & Switches Hub Bridge Switch.
Network+ Guide to Networks 6th Edition
Chapter Six NetworkingHardware. Agenda Questions about Ch. 11 Midterm Exam Ch.6 Cable kit.
Introduction to IT and Communications Technology Justin Champion C208 – 3292 Ethernet Switching CE
Semester 1 Module 8 Ethernet Switching Andres, Wen-Yuan Liao Department of Computer Science and Engineering De Lin Institute of Technology
Chapter 6 High-Speed LANs Chapter 6 High-Speed LANs.
Connecting LANs, (network devices) Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction.
Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs
Common Devices Used In Computer Networks
Brierley 1 Module 4 Module 4 Introduction to LAN Switching.
1/28/2010 Network Plus Network Device Review. Physical Layer Devices Repeater –Repeats all signals or bits from one port to the other –Can be used extend.
Connectivity Devices Hakim S. ADICHE, MSc
Repeaters and Hubs Repeaters: simplest type of connectivity devices that regenerate a digital signal Operate in Physical layer Cannot improve or correct.
 Network Segments  NICs  Repeaters  Hubs  Bridges  Switches  Routers and Brouters  Gateways 2.
Network Devices.
S3C2 – LAN Switching Addressing LAN Problems. Congestion is Caused By Multitasking, Faster operating systems, More Web-based applications Client-Server.
Routing ROUTING Presented by Aditya Kumar Gupta Lecturer, Department of Computer Application SMS Varanasi.
Chapter 6 – Connectivity Devices
Module 8: Ethernet Switching
Chapter Overview Bridging Switching Routing.
CCNA 3 Week 4 Switching Concepts. Copyright © 2005 University of Bolton Introduction Lan design has moved away from using shared media, hubs and repeaters.
1 Kyung Hee University Chapter 15 Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs.
Cisco 3 – Switching Concepts Perrine. J Page 16/1/2016 Module 4 The use of bridges and switches for segmentation results in ____? 1.Multiple broadcast.
Networks and Protocols CE Week 2a. Network hardware.
15.1 Chapter 15 Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or.
Computer Networks 15-1 Chapter 15. Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs 15.1 Connecting devices 15.2 Backbone networks 15.3 Virtual LANs.
PRESENTATION ON:- INTER NETWORK Guided by: Presented by:- Prof. Ekta Agrwal Dhananjay Mishra Prafull Jain Vinod Kumawat.
Semester 3—LAN Switching Chapter 2 Objectives  By the end of this chapter we will be able to perform tasks related to: – Various LAN Communication Problems.
Cisco 3 - Switching Perrine. J Page 16/4/2016 Chapter 4 Switches The performance of shared-medium Ethernet is affected by several factors: data frame broadcast.
1 © 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CCNA 3 v3.0 Module 4 Switching Concepts.
CCNA 1 v3.0 Module 8 Ethernet Switching. Copyright © 2005 University of Bolton Issues with Ethernet On busier shared ethernet networks, collisions become.
Sem1 - Module 8 Ethernet Switching. Shared media environments Shared media environment: –Occurs when multiple hosts have access to the same medium. –For.
NET 324 D Networks and Communication Department Lec1 : Network Devices.
Computer Networks. Internetworking Devices Network Interface Card (NIC) Repeaters HUB Bridge Switch Router.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Connecting Devices CORPORATE INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, BHOPAL Department of Electronics and.
CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking Chapter 2: Network Devices.
Ethernet Overview it the IEEE standard for Ethernet.
Planning and Implementing a Basic SOHO Network using Network Segmentation COMP 316.
 Identify the functions of LAN connectivity hardware  Install, configure, and differentiate between network devices such as NICs, hubs, switches, routers,
CCNA3 Module 4 Brierley Module 4. CCNA3 Module 4 Brierley Topics LAN congestion and its effect on network performance Advantages of LAN segmentation in.
1 CCNA 3 v3.1 Module 4 Switching Concepts Claes Larsen, CCAI.
CCNA3 v3 Module 4 v3 CCNA 3 Module 4 JEOPARDY K. Martin.
15.1 Chapter 15 Connecting LANs, Backbone Networks, and Virtual LANs Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or.
Lec # 25 Computer Network Muhammad Waseem Iqbal. Learn about the Internetworking Devices – Repeaters – Hubs – Switches – Bridges – Routers.
Connectors, Repeaters, Hubs, Bridges, Switches, Routers, NIC’s
Network Devices Repeaters, hubs, bridges, switches, routers, NIC’s.
Networking Devices.
Part III Datalink Layer 10.
Routers Multiport connectivity device
Ethernet : Framing and Addressing
Module 8: Ethernet Switching
Part III Datalink Layer 10.
Chapter 15. Connecting Devices
Connectors, Repeaters, Hubs, Bridges, Switches, Routers, NIC’s
Presentation transcript:

Ethernet Frame PreambleDestination Address Source Address Length/ Type LLC/ Data Frame Check Sequence

Ethernet Addresses n 48 bit n normally shown in HEX n e.g.: C E0 n first 24 bits are obtained from IEEE by hardware manufacturers n one bit is used to distinguish unicast from multicast addresses n one bit is used to distinguish locally assigned addresses(rare) from globally assigned addresses (typical)

Transmission Types n Unicast - intended for one specific station n Broadcast - intended for all stations n Multicast - intended for a group of stations

CSMA/CD n Carrier Sense, Multiple Access with Collision Detection n Carrier sense - don't transmit if there is already a signal n Collision detection - if a collision is detected jam, wait, and retransmit

No Carrier

Transmission

End of Transmission

Transmission

Second Transmission

Collision

Collision detected

Wait

Ethernet HUB (repeater) Layer 1 device Repeat signal on all ports Enforce collision on all segments (jam) Restore amplitude of the signal Retime the signal Single speed May mix media

Repeater Hub

one station transmits

Repeater Hub signal repeated on all other ports

Repeater Hub signal repeated on all other ports

Repeater Hub end of transmission

Repeater Hub

Matrix Module

Collision Domain Devices connected by hubs Only one device can transmit at a time Collisions detected by all devices in the domain

Hub One Collision Domain

Broadcast Domain Devices connected by switches Can contain multiple collision domains One transmission in each collision domain Collisions do not propagate between collision domains Broadcast frames do propagate to all collision domains Can be full duplex if only two devices in collision domain and both devices are full duplex cabable

Switch Hub Three Collision Domains One Broadcast Domain

H – Ethernet Hub S – Ethernet Switch R – IP Router W – Workstation _____ Ethernet Segment R S H W S S H H W W H WW W WW W

H – Ethernet Hub S – Ethernet Switch R – IP Router W – Workstation _____ Ethernet Segment R S H W S S H H W W H WW W WW W

H – Ethernet Hub S – Ethernet Switch R – IP Router W – Workstation _____ Ethernet Segment R S H W S S H H W W H WW W WW W

H – Ethernet Hub S – Ethernet Switch R – IP Router W – Workstation _____ Ethernet Segment R S H W S S H H W W H WW W WW W

Ethernet switch Function (old name) “bridge” Forwards or Filters unicasts Floods (forwards to all ports) all broadcasts Learns address locations Can be full duplex if only two devices in collision domain and both devices are full duplex cabable Can mix speeds and media

switch Hub E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E DASAAction FFE2 E3 E2 FFE5 E6 E5 E4E1 ADDRESSPORT

Switch Light Videos Switch Lights(3.5 MB)Switch Lights Switch Lights – more(5.9 MB)Switch Lights – more

Cut-Through Mode and Store and Forward Mode Cut-through mode –Switching mode in which switch reads a frame’s header and decides where to forward the data before it receives the entire packet –Can detect runts, or packet fragments Store and forward mode –Switching mode in which switch reads the entire data frame into its memory and checks it for accuracy before transmitting it

Using Switches to Create VLANs Virtual local area networks (VLANs) –Means by which a switch can logically group a number of ports into a broadcast domain Broadcast domain –Combination of ports that make up a Layer 2 segment and must be connected to a Layer 3 device FIGURE 6-24 Simple VLAN design

Trunk Aggregation

Resilient Links

Higher-Layer Switches Switch capable of interpreting Layer 3 is called a Layer 3 switch Switch capable of interpreting Layer 4 is called a Layer 4 switch Higher-layer switches may also be called routing switches or application switches

Routers Multiport device Can connect dissimilar LANs and WANs running at different transmission speeds and using a variety of protocols

Router Features and Functions Filter out broadcast transmission to alleviate network congestion Prevent certain types of traffic from getting to a network Support simultaneous local and remote activity Provide high network fault tolerance through redundant components Monitor network traffic and report statistics to a MIB Diagnose internal or other connectivity problems and trigger alarms

Routers FIGURE 6-26 Placement of routers on a LAN

Routing Protocols Means by which routers communicate with each other about network status –Convergence time The time it takes for a router to recognize a best path in the event of a change or outage –Bandwidth overhead Burden placed on an underlying network to support the routing protocol

Routing Protocols RIP (Routing Information Protocol) for IP and IPX OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) for IP –Best path refers to the most efficient route from one node on a network to another EIGRP (Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol) for IP, IPX, and AppleTalk BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) for IP

Gateways Combination of networking hardware and software that connects two dissimilar kinds of networks – gateway –IBM host gateway –Internet gateway –LAN gateway