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Network Layer4-1 The Internet Network layer forwarding table Host, router network layer functions: Routing protocols path selection RIP, OSPF, BGP IP protocol.

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Presentation on theme: "Network Layer4-1 The Internet Network layer forwarding table Host, router network layer functions: Routing protocols path selection RIP, OSPF, BGP IP protocol."— Presentation transcript:

1 Network Layer4-1 The Internet Network layer forwarding table Host, router network layer functions: Routing protocols path selection RIP, OSPF, BGP IP protocol addressing conventions datagram format packet handling conventions ICMP protocol error reporting router “signaling” Transport layer: TCP, UDP Link layer physical layer Network layer

2 Network Layer4-2 IP Addressing: introduction r IP address: 32-bit identifier for host, router interface r interface: connection between host/router and physical link m router’s typically have multiple interfaces m host may have multiple interfaces m IP addresses associated with each interface 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 223.1.1.1 = 11011111 00000001 00000001 00000001 223 111

3 Network Layer4-3 IP Addressing r IP address: m network part (high order bits) m host part (low order bits) r What’s a network ? ( from IP address perspective) m device interfaces with same network part of IP address m can physically reach each other without intervening router 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 network consisting of 3 IP networks (for IP addresses starting with 223, first 24 bits are network address) LAN

4 Network Layer4-4 IP Addresses 0 network host 10 network host 110 networkhost 1110 multicast address A B C D class 1.0.0.0 to 127.255.255.255 128.0.0.0 to 191.255.255.255 192.0.0.0 to 223.255.255.255 224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255 32 bits given notion of “network”, let’s re-examine IP addresses: “class-full” addressing:

5 Network Layer4-5 Getting a datagram from source to dest. IP datagram: 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 A B E misc fields source IP addr dest IP addr data r datagram remains unchanged, as it travels source to destination r addr fields of interest here Dest. Net. next router Nhops 223.1.1 1 223.1.2 223.1.1.4 2 223.1.3 223.1.1.4 2 forwarding table in A

6 Network Layer4-6 Getting a datagram from source to dest. Starting at A, send IP datagram addressed to B: r look up net. address of B in forwarding table r find B is on same net. as A r link layer will send datagram directly to B inside link-layer frame m B and A are directly connected Dest. Net. next router Nhops 223.1.1 1 223.1.2 223.1.1.4 2 223.1.3 223.1.1.4 2 misc fields 223.1.1.1223.1.1.3 data 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 A B E forwarding table in A

7 Network Layer4-7 Getting a datagram from source to dest. Dest. Net. next router Nhops 223.1.1 1 223.1.2 223.1.1.4 2 223.1.3 223.1.1.4 2 Starting at A, dest. E: r look up network address of E in forwarding table r E on different network m A, E not directly attached r routing table: next hop router to E is 223.1.1.4 r link layer sends datagram to router 223.1.1.4 inside link- layer frame r datagram arrives at 223.1.1.4 r continued….. misc fields 223.1.1.1223.1.2.2 data 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 A B E forwarding table in A

8 Network Layer4-8 Getting a datagram from source to dest. Arriving at 223.1.4, destined for 223.1.2.2 r look up network address of E in router’s forwarding table r E on same network as router’s interface 223.1.2.9 m router, E directly attached r link layer sends datagram to 223.1.2.2 inside link-layer frame via interface 223.1.2.9 r datagram arrives at 223.1.2.2!!! misc fields 223.1.1.1223.1.2.3 data Dest. Net router Nhops interface 223.1.1 - 1 223.1.1.4 223.1.2 - 1 223.1.2.9 223.1.3 - 1 223.1.3.27 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 A B E forwarding table in router

9 Network Layer4-9 IP datagram format ver length 32 bits data (variable length, typically a TCP or UDP segment) 16-bit identifier Internet checksum time to live 32 bit source IP address IP protocol version number header length (bytes) max number remaining hops (decremented at each router) for fragmentation/ reassembly total datagram length (bytes) upper layer protocol to deliver payload to head. len type of service “type” of data flgs fragment offset upper layer 32 bit destination IP address Options (if any) E.g. timestamp, record route taken, specify list of routers to visit. how much overhead with TCP? r 20 bytes of TCP r 20 bytes of IP r = 40 bytes + app layer overhead

10 Network Layer4-10 IP Fragmentation & Reassembly r network links have MTU (max.transfer size) - largest possible link-level frame. m different link types, different MTUs r large IP datagram divided (“fragmented”) within net m one datagram becomes several datagrams m “reassembled” only at final destination m IP header bits used to identify, order related fragments fragmentation: in: one large datagram out: 3 smaller datagrams reassembly

11 Network Layer4-11 IP Fragmentation and Reassembly ID =x offset =0 fragflag =0 length =4000 ID =x offset =0 fragflag =1 length =1500 ID =x offset =1480 fragflag =1 length =1500 ID =x offset =2960 fragflag =0 length =1040 One large datagram becomes several smaller datagrams Example r 4000 byte datagram r MTU = 1500 bytes

12 Network Layer4-12 IP addressing: CIDR r Classful addressing: m inefficient use of address space, address space exhaustion m e.g., class B net allocated enough addresses for 65K hosts, even if only 2K hosts in that network r CIDR: Classless InterDomain Routing m network portion of address of arbitrary length m address format: a.b.c.d/x, where x is # bits in network portion of address 11001000 00010111 00010000 00000000 network part host part 200.23.16.0/23

13 Network Layer4-13 DHCP: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Goal: allow host to dynamically obtain its IP address from network server when it joins network Can renew its lease on address in use Allows reuse of addresses (only hold address while connected an “on” Support for mobile users who want to join network (more shortly) DHCP overview: m host broadcasts “DHCP discover” msg m DHCP server responds with “DHCP offer” msg m host requests IP address: “DHCP request” msg m DHCP server sends address: “DHCP ack” msg

14 Network Layer4-14 DHCP client-server scenario 223.1.1.1 223.1.1.2 223.1.1.3 223.1.1.4 223.1.2.9 223.1.2.2 223.1.2.1 223.1.3.2 223.1.3.1 223.1.3.27 A B E DHCP server arriving DHCP client needs address in this network

15 Network Layer4-15 Routing in the Internet r The Global Internet consists of Autonomous Systems (AS) interconnected with each other: m Stub AS: small corporation: one connection to other AS’s m Multihomed AS: large corporation (no transit): multiple connections to other AS’s m Transit AS: provider, hooking many AS’s together r Two-level routing: m Intra-AS: administrator responsible for choice of routing algorithm within network m Inter-AS: unique standard for inter-AS routing: BGP

16 Network Layer4-16 Internet AS Hierarchy Intra-AS border (exterior gateway) routers Inter-AS interior (gateway) routers

17 Network Layer4-17 Intra-AS Routing r Also known as Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) r Most common Intra-AS routing protocols: m RIP: Routing Information Protocol m OSPF: Open Shortest Path First m IGRP: Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (Cisco proprietary)

18 Network Layer4-18 Inter-AS routing in the Internet: BGP

19 Network Layer4-19 Why different Intra- and Inter-AS routing ? Policy: r Inter-AS: admin wants control over how its traffic routed, who routes through its net. r Intra-AS: single admin, so no policy decisions needed Scale: r hierarchical routing saves table size, reduced update traffic Performance: r Intra-AS: can focus on performance r Inter-AS: policy may dominate over performance


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