0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views18 pages

Communication Networks: Chapter 3 (Stallings Book)

This document discusses different types of communication networks like LANs, MANs, and WANs. It describes the key differences between LANs and WANs. The document also covers circuit switching and packet switching techniques used in networks. It explains the phases of circuit switching and characteristics of both circuit and packet switching, including their relative advantages and disadvantages.

Uploaded by

Prateek Sahgal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views18 pages

Communication Networks: Chapter 3 (Stallings Book)

This document discusses different types of communication networks like LANs, MANs, and WANs. It describes the key differences between LANs and WANs. The document also covers circuit switching and packet switching techniques used in networks. It explains the phases of circuit switching and characteristics of both circuit and packet switching, including their relative advantages and disadvantages.

Uploaded by

Prateek Sahgal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18

Communication Networks

Chapter 3 (Stallings Book)

1
Types of Communication
Networks
 High-speed local area network (LAN)
 Metropolitan area network (MAN)
 High-speed wide area network (WAN)

2
LANs vs. WANs
 Scope of a LAN is smaller
 LAN interconnects devices within a single
building or cluster of buildings
 LAN usually owned by organization that
owns the attached devices
 For WANs, most of network assets are not
owned by same organization
 Internal data rate of LAN is much greater

3
Switching Terms
 Switching Nodes:
 Intermediate switching device that moves data
 Not concerned with content of data
 Stations:
 End devices that wish to communicate
 Each station is connected to a switching node
 Communications Network:
 A collection of switching nodes

4
Switched Network
Techniques Used in Switched
Networks
 Circuit switching
 Dedicated communications path between two
stations
 E.g., public telephone network
 Packet switching
 Message is broken into a series of packets
 Each node determines next leg of transmission
for each packet

6
Phases of Circuit Switching
 Circuit establishment
 An end to end circuit is established through switching
nodes
 Information Transfer
 Information transmitted through the network
 Data may be analog voice, digitized voice, or binary
data
 Circuit disconnect
 Circuit is terminated
 Each node deallocates dedicated resources

7
Characteristics of Circuit
Switching
 Can be inefficient
 Channel capacity dedicated for duration of connection
 Utilization not 100%
 Delay prior to signal transfer for establishment
 Once established, network is transparent to users
 Information transmitted at fixed data rate with
only propagation delay

8
How Packet Switching Works
 Data is transmitted in blocks, called packets
 Before sending, the message is broken into
a series of packets
 Typical packet length is 1000 octets (bytes)
 Packets consists of a portion of data plus a
packet header that includes control information
 At each node in route, packet is received,
stored briefly and passed to the next node.

9
Packet Switching
Packet Switching
Packet Switching Advantages
 Line efficiency is greater
 Many packets over time can dynamically share the
same node to node link
 Packet-switching networks can carry out data-rate
conversion
 Two stations with different data rates can exchange
information
 Unlike circuit-switching networks that block calls
when traffic is heavy, packet-switching still
accepts packets, but with increased delivery delay
 Priorities can be used

12
Disadvantages of Packet
Switching
 Each packet switching node introduces a delay
 Overall packet delay can vary substantially
 This is referred to as jitter
 Caused by differing packet sizes, routes taken and
varying delay in the switches
 Each packet requires overhead information
 Includes destination and sequencing information
 Reduces communication capacity
 More processing required at each node

13
Out-of-Order Datagrams
 Each packet treated independently, without
reference to previous packets
 Packets don’t necessarily follow same route and may
arrive out of sequence
 Exit node restores packets to original order
 Responsibility of detecting packet loss and recover
 Advantages:
 Call setup phase is avoided
 Because it’s more primitive, it’s more flexible

14
Pipeline Effects
 Breaking up packets decreases transmission time
because transmission is allowed to overlap
 Figure 3.9a
 Entire message (40 octets) + header information (3
octets) sent at once
 Transmission time: 129 octet-times
 Figure 3.9b
 Message broken into 2 packets (20 octets) + header (3
octets)
 Transmission time: 92 octet-times

15
Effect of Packet Size on
Transmission
time

router
 Figure 3.9c
 Message broken into 5 packets (8 octets) + header (3
octets)
 Transmission time: 77 octet-times
 Figure 3.9d
 Making the packets too small, transmission time starts
increases
 Each packet requires a fixed header; the more packets,
the more headers
 Example: ATM’s cell = 53 bytes

17
Conclusions
 communication network concept
 LAN, MAN, WAN
 switching technology
 circuit-switching, packet-switching

18

You might also like