© Janice Regan, CMPT 128, Jan 2007 CMPT 371 Data Communications and Networking Switching and throughput Multiplexing 0.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CSE 413: Computer Networks
Advertisements

Switching Techniques In large networks there might be multiple paths linking sender and receiver. Information may be switched as it travels through various.
Data Communications and Networking
Ch. 8 Multiplexing.
Module 3.4: Switching Circuit Switching Packet Switching K. Salah.
ECEN “Mobile Wireless Networking”
Introduction© Dr. Ayman Abdel-Hamid, CS4254 Spring CS4254 Computer Network Architecture and Programming Dr. Ayman A. Abdel-Hamid Computer Science.
Lecture 2 Introduction 1-1 Chapter 1: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? 1.2 Network edge  end systems, access networks, links 1.3 Network core  circuit.
1 K. Salah Module 3.3: Multiplexing WDM FDM TDM T-1 ADSL.
ECS 152A 6. Multiplexing.
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7th Edition
EE 4272Spring, 2003 Chapter 9: Circuit Switching Switching Networks Circuit-Switching Networks Circuit-Switching Concept  Space-Division Switching  Time-Division.
Lecture Internet Overview: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? (A simple overview last week) Today, A closer look at the Internet structure! 1.2 Network.
Lecture Internet Overview: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? 1.2 Network edge  end systems, access networks, links 1.3 Network core  circuit switching,
Module 2.2: ADSL, ISDN, SONET
Lecture Internet Overview: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? 1.2 Network edge  end systems, access networks, links 1.3 Network core  circuit switching,
NETE 0510 Presented by Dr.Apichan Kanjanavapastit
Switching Techniques Student: Blidaru Catalina Elena.
Data Communications and Networking
Data and Computer Communications Chapter 8 – Multiplexing
Communication Networks
1 Computer Communication & Networks Lecture 4 Circuit Switching, Packet Switching, Delays Waleed.
What is a Protocol A set of definitions and rules defining the method by which data is transferred between two or more entities or systems. The key elements.
Multiplexing.
Network Technology CSE3020 Week 5
Data Comm. & Networks Instructor: Ibrahim Tariq Lecture 3.
Networks for Distributed Systems n network types n Connection-oriented and connectionless communication n switching technologies l circuit l packet.
Review of Networking Concepts Part 1: Switching Networks
CSCI 465 D ata Communications and Networks Lecture 12 Martin van Bommel CSCI 465 Data Communications & Networks 1.
Chapter 2 – X.25, Frame Relay & ATM. Switched Network Stations are not connected together necessarily by a single link Stations are typically far apart.
1 William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7 th Edition Chapter 8 Multiplexing.
02 – Performance Basics 1CS Computer Networks.
ECE 466 Switching Networks. ECE 466 A communication network provides a scalable solution to connect a large number of end systems Communication Networks.
Data and Computer Communications Chapter 10 – Circuit Switching and Packet Switching (Wide Area Networks)
Sami Al-wakeel 1 Data Transmission and Computer Networks The Switching Networks.
Data and Computer Communications Circuit Switching and Packet Switching.
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7 th Edition Chapter 1 Data Communications and Networks Overview.
Computer Networks with Internet Technology William Stallings
Computer Networks Chapter 6 - Multiplexing. Spring 2006Computer Networks2 Multiplexing  The term “multiplexing” is used whenever it is necessary to share.
6.1 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
EEC4113 Data Communication & Multimedia System Chapter 7: Network Layer by Muhazam Mustapha, October 2011.
Chapter 6 Multiplexing.
Data Comm. & Networks Instructor: Ibrahim Tariq Lecture 3.
Lecture # 03 Switching Course Instructor: Engr. Sana Ziafat.
Unit III Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spectrum Spreading In practical life the bandwidth available of links is limited. The proper utilization.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 CH. 8: SWITCHING & DATAGRAM NETWORKS 7.1.
WAN Transmission Media
CSE 413: Computer Network Circuit Switching and Packet Switching Networks Md. Kamrul Hasan
1 Switching and Forwarding Sections Connecting More Than Two Hosts Multi-access link: Ethernet, wireless –Single physical link, shared by multiple.
Computer Networks Chapter 8 – Circuit Switching versus Packet Switching.
Introduction1-1 Data Communications and Computer Networks Chapter 1 CS 3830 Lecture 2 Omar Meqdadi Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering.
Computer Communication & Networks Lecture # 03 Circuit Switching, Packet Switching Nadeem Majeed Choudhary
Data Communication Networks Lec 13 and 14. Network Core- Packet Switching.
Lecture # 3: WAN Data Communication Network L.Rania Ahmed Tabeidi.
Introduction to Communication Lecture (07) 1. Bandwidth utilization Bandwidth utilization is the wise use of available bandwidth to achieve specific goals.
© Janice Regan, CMPT 128, Jan 2007 CMPT 371 Data Communications and Networking Delays throughput and packet loss Multiplexing 0.
Data and Computer Communications Chapter 7 Circuit Switching and Packet Switching.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Muhammad Waseem Iqbal Lecture # 20 Data Communication.
Chapter 2 PHYSICAL LAYER.
A Taxonomy of Communication Networks
Packet Switching Datagram Approach Virtual Circuit Approach
Subject Name:COMPUTER NETWORKS-1
Switching Techniques In large networks there might be multiple paths linking sender and receiver. Information may be switched as it travels through various.
SWITCHING Switched Network Circuit-Switched Network Datagram Networks
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications
Switching Techniques In large networks there might be multiple paths linking sender and receiver. Information may be switched as it travels through various.
Data Communication Networks
Switching.
Presentation transcript:

© Janice Regan, CMPT 128, Jan 2007 CMPT 371 Data Communications and Networking Switching and throughput Multiplexing 0

Travels through a network  Data can travel along different paths from one station to another through the network Janice Regan © Sept Station 1 Station 2Station 3 Station 14Station 13 Station 12 Station 7 Station 9 Station 6 Station 10 Station 4Station 5 Station 6 Station 11

What is a hop Janice Regan © Sept Host 1 Host 2 Host 3 First hop Host 1 is source Host 2 is receiver Host 1 Host 2 Host 3 Second hop Host 2 is source Host 3 is receiver

More Travel through a network  Does all data in a message take the same path?  What happens to data between each hop, what does each station do to the data passing through it ? Janice Regan © Sept Station 1 Station 2Station 3 Station 14Station 13 Station 12 Station 7 Station 9 Station 6 Station 10 Station 4Station 5 Station 6 Station 11

Approached to network travel  We can take different approaches to managing data  Circuit switching: make a connection along a particular path and send all data in the message through that path  Packet switching: break the message into pieces and send each piece separately along its own path  Virtual circuit switching: break the message into pieces, Use software to simulate a connection in a packet switched network Janice Regan © Sept

Circuit Switching  Connection Oriented  A path or circuit, or series of hops through the network, from the sending station to the receiving station is established, used as dedicated link, then disconnected  The communications links used for the dedicated link are not available to other users for making other connections  Origin: analog telephone networks Janice Regan © Sept

Packet Switching  Packet Switching: Connectionless  The message is broken into packets.  Each packet travels through the network separately and can take a different path through the network  Each packet is transferred 1 hop at a time, The intermediate stations need only wait for the end of the packet not the end of the message  The communications links used to send the packet are not reserved for any particular connection and are available to all end systems Janice Regan © Sept

Virtual Circuit Switching  Used in packet switched networks  Uses software to simulate a connection  At any time any station can have multiple virtual circuit connections to the same or different destinations.  Virtual circuits allow retransmission of data packets that arrive with errors. Error/Flow control is associated with the virtual circuit Janice Regan © Sept

Packet Switching: virtual circuit  At the beginning of each data exchange between a source and a receiver, a single path or virtual circuit from the source to the receiver is established and all packets in the exchange follow this path. Since packets follow the same path they arrive in order  The virtual circuit is not dedicated. Each packet will be queued for transmission at each hop along with any other traffic traveling across that particular link. Thus, when the virtual circuit connection is not being used by the source and receiver in this exchange it may be used by other exchanges. Janice Regan © Sept

Circuit Switching  A path or circuit through the network is established. This path consists of a series of hops between nodes or switches, then a final hop to the receiver.  The switches have the intelligence to help determine a path through the network and allocate available resources  Once the circuit is established it is used as dedicated link  Data is transferred through that circuit, flow control is end to end (not hop by hop)  If data is in the form of a series of bursts, the time between bursts is not utilized. The utilization of the connection will be low if the data is a series of bursts  When the session is over the circuit is closed Janice Regan © Sept

Circuit Switching: Advantages  Provides a dedicated link  Efficient for continuous transmission  Do not have delay of waiting for packets to arrive before data can be forwarded along the next hop of the path  Easier to implement control for quality of service  Guaranteed bandwidth Janice Regan © Sept

Circuit Switching: Problems  Inefficient when data comes in bursts, during the time between bursts the connection is allocated but not being used  Overhead required to establish and break circuit  Connection must be reestablished if there is a problem with any switch along the established path  Cannot send at a rate higher than your allocated share of resources even if you are the only user Janice Regan © Sept

Packet switching  Each message sent is broken into small pieces called packets  Each packet is sent through the network separately  At each hop the packet must be forwarded to the next host along the path to the destination Janice Regan © Sept

Packet travel times  Packets can travel along different paths from one station to another  Different paths have different travel times  Packets that leave in order A-B-C may arrive in any order, because they travel along different paths with different travel times Janice Regan © Sept Station 9 Station 6 Station 10 Station 4Station 5 Station 6 Station 11

Store and Forward node  A network node that  receives and stores incoming packets  checks incoming packets for bit level errors  Forwards the correct packets to the next store and forward node  Important: Think of each hop as a separate communication Janice Regan © Sept

Store and Forward node  Important: Think of each hop as a separate communication  Source sends packet  Receiver receives packet and queues it If the queue is full the receiver drops the packet  Receiver checks the packet for correctness. If a packet is not correct the receiver may drop the packet (best effort transmission)  Otherwise the receiver then passes packet on to another connection Janice Regan © Sept

Traffic Control on Networks Janice Regan © Sept After Figure Stallings (2003) Packet transmission time (transmission delay )

Queuing delay  As the packet travels to each intermediate or final destination there are possible additional delays  Each time a packet arrives at a host or router or switch there is a possibility that it must enter a queue of packets waiting to be processed.  The time the packet resides in this queue, before the processing of the packet begins is the queuing delay Janice Regan © Sept

Queuing delay  When a packet arrives at a store and forward node, if the store an forward node is busy processing another packet it will be placed in a queue waiting for its turn.  Unlike other delays, different for different packets because the length of queue varies independent of the packet  Usually analyze queuing delays statistically Janice Regan © Sept

Processing delay  When a packet reaches a store and forward node  Its header must be read and analyzed  Its contents must be checked for bit level errors.  The time taken to do such checks is the processing delay. Janice Regan © Sept

Transmission delay  When a packet is sent the hardware used translates one bit at a time and inserts it onto the transmission medium. This operation takes time.  The time taken for all bits in the packet to be inserted into the transmission medium is the transmission delay Janice Regan © Sept

Propagation Delay  Each bit must travel from the source to the destination through the transmission medium  The time taken by each bit to travel from the source to the destination is the propagation delay Janice Regan © Sept

Packet loss  The length of the queue is finite, therefore when the system is busy it is possible for a packet to arrive and find there is no room in the queue: Such a packet is dropped  A packet may have bits corrupted in transmission. Such a packet will not pass the tests for bit level errors and will thus not reach the queue at all Janice Regan © Sept

Traffic Control on Networks Janice Regan © Sept After Figure Stallings (2003) Packet transmission time (transmission delay )

Optimal Packet size  Consider the previous figure. The packet takes a 3 hop path through the network  Message could sent as a single packet: message switching  Message could be broken into smaller packets: packet switching  How do we determine the optimal size for a packet/message Janice Regan © Sept

Single message  Consider the previous figure. The packet takes a 3 hop path through the network  Message is sent as a single packet: message switching  The amount of added overhead due to packet headers is minimal since only one packet header is needed  the intermediate nodes must wait until the entire packet has arrived before the packet can be FCS checked and queued for transmission across the next hop. (longer wait) Janice Regan © Sept

Packets  Consider the previous figure. The packet takes a 3 hop path through the network  When the message is broken into smaller packets (packet switching)  The amount of added overhead due to packet headers increases as the size of the packet decreases  The delay, waiting for each packet to arrive, at each intermediate node is reduced as the length of the packets are reduced  The amount of data to be retransmitted if a packet is lost is reduced Janice Regan © Sept

Effect of packet size Janice Regan © Sept Stallings 2003: Figure 10.14

Optimal Packet size  First consider the delay for the single packet case where T p, transmission time of the packet T h transmission time of the header T prop propagation time per transmission N trans # of time the signal is transmitted Janice Regan © Sept

Optimal Packet size  For the two packet case  For the five packet case  Therefore we can generalize the relation to  For #hops equal to N trans -1 (alternate definition) Janice Regan © Sept

Packet size considerations  Delay is introduced by requiring packet, or section of message, to arrive at an intermediate station before the message is forwarded is smaller than for message switching  Shorter packets are less likely to contain errors and require retransmission than long messages  Packet headers add additional overhead that increases as the size of the packet decreases  Waits for next link will be minimized if smaller packets of data are being transmitted as single units  Required retransmissions are shorter, and add less additional load to the system Janice Regan © Sept

Packet Switching:  No call setup or call termination required.  Each packet, referred to as a datagram, is sent individually, and is routed through the network individually  Packets with the same source and destination may take different paths through the network and thus may arrive at the receiver out of order  Flexible reaction to congestion and failure  Robust delivery of packets, less loss of information in lost packet than in broken virtual connection when a node fails Janice Regan © Sept

Multiplexing  When multiple signals are carried through a single transmission medium at the same time, the signals are multiplexed  Multiplexing allows the efficient use of wider band transmission media. Such media can carry multiple narrower band signals.  Long haul links are frequently examples of high capacity channels  The multiple signals must be combined or multiplexed in such a way that the individual signals can be easily extracted from the composite signal (demultiplexed) on reception Janice Regan © Sept

Methods of Multiplexing  Frequency Division Multiplexing  Time Division Multiplexing  Synchronous  Statistical  Code Division Multiplexing (spread spectrum) Janice Regan © Sept Diagram Stallings 2003:Figure 8.1

FDM and TDM Janice Regan © Sept Stallings 2003:Figure 8.2

Frequency Division Multiplexing  When the transmission media has a bandwidth many times larger than the bandwidth of the signal to be transmitted, it makes sense to transmit more than one signal at a time through the medium.  Each of the signals to be transmitted are modulated to a different carrier frequency.  The different carrier frequencies are separated by at least the bandwidth of the individual signals to be transmitted  The frequency bandwidth is shared by the signals being simultaneously transmitted Janice Regan © Sept

Frequency division multiplexing Janice Regan © Sept f min Bandwidth of Medium is f max -f min f max Bandwidth of each signal f1f1 f2f2 f3f3 f4f4 f5f5 f6f6 f7f7 f8f8 f (i+1} =f i + bandwidth of signal

FDM  Examples of FDM include multiplexing of voice signals over telephone lines, and multiplexing of cable channels into the allocated cable frequency band  FDM can be done in stages. M signals can be multiplexed into a particular frequency band. Groups of M signal can then be combined and multiplexed into a larger frequency band Janice Regan © Sept

FDM multiplexing system Janice Regan © Sept Stallings 2003:Figure 8.3

FDM and voice signals: 1  A typical voice signal has an effective spectrum of 300 to 3400 Hz, When multiplexing signals the signals must be adequately separated, so allow 4KHz bandwidth for each voice signal  A voice signal can be modulated so that the spectrum of the modulated signal has a center frequency at the frequency of the modulation carrier f c,  If the carrier has a bandwidth between f 1 Hz and f 2 Hz then f c would be chosen to be f 1 +4KHz Janice Regan © Sept

Cable and ADSL  ADSL uses the fixed telephone system.  Each user has a dedicated connection to the end office  User must be close enough to the end office  Each of these connections use twisted pair  Capacity of twisted pair less than capacity of cable  Uses FDM  Cable shares a higher capacity coaxial cable between multiple users.  Available capacity may be higher or lower than ADSL  Can intercept packets of other users on the same cable link  Uses TDM Janice Regan © Sept

ADSL access to Internet Janice Regan © Sept Telecom’s Internet Access LOCAL PHONE OFFICE TELEPHONE SWITCH & DSLAC: Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer

Cable access to Internet Janice Regan © Sept Cable Providers Internet Access

ADSL  Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line, to 8Mbps downstream and 1Mbps upstream. (Typically 512 kbps and 64 kbps)  Provides high speed access over twisted pair telephone wires. Up to 256 4MHz channels available  Normal telephone connection filtered to 4KHz bandwidth at end office (switching station)  For ADSL filter is removed making entire capacity of the twisted pair (category 3) available to the user. The capacity and attainable speed depend on the distance from the end office (length of connection).  Typical user needs more downstream capacity than upstream capacity for internet applications  Uses FDM and/or discrete multitone (DMT) Janice Regan © Sept

ADSL channel configurations Janice Regan © Sept

Wavelength Division Multiplexing  Used with optical fibre  Light passing through the fiber consists of many colours or wavelengths (frequencies)  Each wavelength carries a signal  The fibre can carry many signals at the same time, as signals with different wavelengths  As many as 160 channels at 10 Gbps  Used for cable (between central offices) Janice Regan © Sept

TDM (Time Division)  The data are organized in frames  Each frame contains a cycle of time slots  A sequence of slots dedicated to one source is a channel  Data from different sources is inserted into slots or channels in some sequence  Synchronous TDM slots are filled from a predetermined sequence of sources. If there is no data to transmit an ‘idle’ signal is sent (circuit switching)  Statistical TDM fills slots as data is available. There is not preset sequence. Therefore, data must be associated with the source by address. No empty or ‘idle’ slots are sent if any source has data ready to transmit. Idle is sent only if all channels have no data to transmit (packet switching) Janice Regan © Sept

Synchronous TDM 47 Stallings 2003:Figure 8.6 Channel (1 or more slots) Cycle of time slots

Statistical TDM  Time slots are not preallocated to particular sources, they are allocated on demand.  There are M sources, N available channels.: M>=N  Rather than transmitting an idle signal when no data is available from a source i, data from source j can be transmitted.  The data rate of the transmission line can be smaller than the sum of the data rates for all sources being serviced  At peak times the data rate of received data from the sources may exceed the data rate of the transmission media. In these cases excess data must be buffered in the multiplexer for later transmission Janice Regan © Sept

Statistical TDM  Statistical TDM is most useful is systems where sources do not broadcast continuously.  If each source broadcasts 80% of the time. Statistical TDM can handle 20% more channels than asynchronous TDM  There are overhead costs associated with this gain in efficiency.  Sources are not transmitted in a predetermined order, so there is not a direct way to know which source is being transmitted in a given channel. Thus, each channel must contain an address that indicates the source Janice Regan © Sept

Internet over Cable  HFC (Hybrid Fiber and Coax systems)  Coaxial cables for users and local branches  Branches connecting to optical fiber trunks  Use a cable modem connected to your computer  Cable modems follow DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification)  Assymetric data flow Janice Regan © Sept

Spectrum allocation for cable Janice Regan © Sept Downstream data TV and FM radio Upstream data downstream MHz 750 upstream

Data transfer using cable  Upstream channel (from user) is divided into slots. Each modem is assigned a slot. More than one modem can be assigned to a particular slot causing possible contention  A user will request downstream capacity, be granted the capacity and then receive the information at the appointed time Janice Regan © Sept

Cable Modem TDM Scheme Janice Regan © Sept Downstream No contention