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Internetworking Lecture 10 October 23, 2000. Introduction to Internetworking So far, we’ve discussed about how a single network functions. Internetworking.

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Presentation on theme: "Internetworking Lecture 10 October 23, 2000. Introduction to Internetworking So far, we’ve discussed about how a single network functions. Internetworking."— Presentation transcript:

1 Internetworking Lecture 10 October 23, 2000

2 Introduction to Internetworking So far, we’ve discussed about how a single network functions. Internetworking is how multiple networks are connected. All material from here relates to “the big picture.”

3 Why Internetworking? Each network has its own specific task. – LAN functionality – WAN functionality Internetworking is a culmination of multiple, independent networks being developed. In another light, internetworking is the glue behind the Internet.

4 Universal Service Universal Service is the concept that any device on any network can communicate with any arbitrary device on another network. The Internet is a heterogeneous environment, with multiple, independent network topologies. In LANs, we have seen that heterogeneous technologies cannot interconnect without the help of a device to translate from one medium to another.

5 Internetworking The interconnects between different networks are a combination of hardware and software elements. Routers provide the proper hardware/software translation to connect two different networks together. – LAN routers – WAN routers

6 The Router The router is very similar to a bridge. – Memory – CPU – Separate I/O ports for each network topology

7 The Router (cont.) The router can perform multiple tasks – LAN / LAN routing – WAN / WAN routing – LAN / WAN routing The clouds in each picture can represent a different network topology (FDDI, Ethernet), address scheme (IP, IPX), or both!

8 Internet Architecture The book likes to use the cloud diagram:

9 I Like This Diagram

10 Why the Later is Realistic Rarely do you have a “linear” network! – Inefficient transport – Bandwidth limitations in the “middle” A Universal Service goal not only dictates if you can talk to another machine, but how fast! Reliability Capacity Cost

11 Internet as a Virtual Network

12 Internetworking and TCP/IP ARPANet NSFNet TCP/IP

13 TCP/IP Layers These are not hard and fast rules. Many different models exist. Layer 1: Physical Layer 2: Network Interface Layer 3: Internet Layer 4: Transport Layer 5: Application

14 TCP/IP & ISO Model Application (Layers 6 and 7 in ISO model) Transport (Layer 4 in ISO model) Internet (Layer 3 in ISO) Network Interface (Layer 2 in ISO) Physical (Layer 1 in ISO)


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