Chapter 15
Chapter 15
Chapter 15
Chapter Goals
Describe the core issues related to computer networks List various types of networks and their characteristics Explain various topologies of local-area networks Explain why network technologies are best implemented as open systems
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Chapter Goals
Compare and contrast various technologies for home Internet connections Explain packet switching Describe the basic roles of various network protocols Explain the role of a firewall Compare and contrast network hostnames and IP addresses Explain the domain name system
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Networking
Computer network
A collection of computing devices connected in order to communicate and share resources Connections between computing devices can be physical using wires or cables or wireless using radio waves or infrared signals
Networking
Node (host) Any device on a network Data transfer rate (bandwidth) The speed with which data is moved from one place to another on a network
Networking
Computer networks have opened up an entire frontier in the world of computing called the client/server model
Networking
Protocol
A set of rules that defines how data is formatted and processed on a network; i.e., rules that allow client/server interaction
File server A computer that stores and manages files for multiple users on a network Web server A computer dedicated to responding to requests (from the browser client) for web pages
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Types of Networks
Local-area network (LAN)
A network that connects a relatively small number of machines in a relatively close geographical area
Ring topology connects all nodes in a closed loop on which messages travel in one direction Star topology centers around one node to which all others are connected and through which all messages are sent Bus topology nodes are connected to a single communication line that carries messages in both directions
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Types of Networks
Types of Networks
Wide-area network (WAN)
A network that connects local-area networks over a potentially large geographic distance
Metropolitan-area network (MAN) The communication infrastructures that have been developed in and around large cities Gateway One particular set up to handle all communication going between that LAN and other networks
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Types of Networks
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Figure 15.1 Local-area networks connected across a distance to create a wide-area network
Types of Networks
Internet A wide area network that spans the planet So, who owns the Internet?
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Internet Connections
Internet backbone A set of high-speed networks that carry Internet traffic, provided by companies such as AT&T, GTE, and IBM Internet service provider (ISP) A company that provides other companies or individuals with access to the Internet
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Internet Connections
Various technologies available to connect a home computer to the Internet
Phone modem converts computer data into an analog audio signal for transfer over a telephone line, and then a modem at the destination converts it back again into data
Digital subscriber line (DSL) uses regular copper phone lines to transfer digital data to and from the phone companys central office
Cable modem uses the same line that your cable TV signals come in on to transfer the data back and forth
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Internet Connections
Broadband A connection in which transfer speeds are faster than 128 bps (bits per second)
DSL connections and cable modems are broadband connections
The speed for downloads (getting data from the Internet to your home computer) may not be the same as uploads (sending data from your home computer to the Internet)
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Packet Switching
Packet
Packet Switching
Figure 15.4 Messages sent by packet switching
Take a message, break it into three packets, and simulate this process
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Open Systems
A logical progression...
Proprietary system A system that uses technologies kept private by a particular commercial vendor Interoperability The ability of software and hardware on multiple machines and from multiple commercial vendors to communicate Open systems Systems based on a common model of network architecture and a suite of protocols used in its implementation
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Open Systems
Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model A seven-layer logical break down of network interaction to facilitate communication standards Each layer deals with a particular aspect of network communication
Figure 15.5 The layers of the OSI Reference Model
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Network Protocols
Network protocols are layered such that each one relies on the protocols that underlie it Sometimes referred to as a protocol stack
TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
Software that breaks messages into packets, hands them off to the IP software for delivery, and then orders and reassembles the packets at their destination
Internet Protocol (IP) Software that deals with the routing of packets through the maze of interconnected networks to their final destination
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TCP/IP
User Datagram Protocol (DP)
A program that shows the route a packet takes across the Internet
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High-Level Protocols
Other protocols build on TCP/IP protocol suite
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) used to specify transfer of electronic mail File Transfer Protocol (FTP) allows a user to transfer files to and from another computer Telnet used to log onto one computer from another Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (http) allows exchange of Web documents Which of these have you used?
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High-Level Protocols
Port A numeric designation that corresponds to a particular high-level protocol
MIME Types
MIME type A standard for defining the format of files that are included as email attachments or on websites What does MIME stand for?
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Firewalls
Firewall A gateway machine and its software that protects a network by filtering the traffic it allows Access control policy A set of rules established by an organization that specify what types of network communication are permitted and denied
Have your messages ever been returned undelivered, blocked by a firewall?
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Firewalls
Network Addresses
Hostname
A name made up of words separated by dots that uniquely identifies a computer on the Internet
IP address An address made up of four one-byte numeric values separated by dots that uniquely identifies a computer on the Internet Is there a correspondence between the parts of a hostname and an IP address?
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Network Addresses
Class A: first byte network address and three bytes for host number Class B: first two bytes for network address and two bytes for host number
Class C: first three bytes for network address and one byte for host number Where does the host number come from?
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The part of the IP address that specifies a particular host on the network Yes, but what is it?
Domain name The part of a hostname that specifies a specific organization or group Top-level domain (TLD) The last section of a Domain name that specifies the type of organization or its country of origin
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Figure 15.11 Some of the top-level domain names based on country codes 33
Ethical Issues
Ubiquitous Computing
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Who am I?
What two major awards did I win ? For what were they given ?
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Do you know?
What is SETI? What does it have to do with extraterrestrials? For what did Bill Gates receive a Knighthood from Queen Elizabeth? What are "Captcha" codes? For what are they used?
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