Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 1 Introduction
Introduction
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Data Communications and Networking
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1.1 DATA COMMUNICATIONS
The term telecommunication means communication at a
distance. The word data refers to information presented in
whatever form is agreed upon by the parties creating and
using the data. Data communications are the exchange of
data between two devices via some form of transmission
medium such as a wire cable.
Delivery
must deliver data to the correct destination
(the intended device or user)
Accuracy
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Data communication system components (cont’d)
Message
is the information(data) to be communicated.
(text, numbers, pictures, sound, video or any combination of
these)
Sender
is the device that sends the data message.
(computer, workstation, telephone handset, video camera)
Receiver
is the device that receives the message.
(computer, workstation, telephone handset, video camera)
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Data communication system components (cont’d)
Medium
Protocol
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Data Presentation
Text is represented as a bit pattern.
Code : Each sets of bit patterns to represent text symbols.
ASCII : by ANSI, 7bits
Extended ASCII, 8bits
Unicode : 16 bits
ISO : 32bits
Simplex
Half-Duplex
each station can both transmit and receive, but not at the same
time
Full-Duplex
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1.2 NETWORKS
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Network Criteria
Network Criteria
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Performance
number of users
hardware
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Reliability
Frequency of failure
Catastrophe
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Security
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Physical Structures
Type of Network Connection
Point-to-point
provides a dedicated link between two devices.
Multipoint : multi-drop
is configuration in which more than two specific devices share a
single link
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Physical Structures (cont’d)
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Physical Topology
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Physical Topology
Mesh
Every device has a dedicated point-to-point link to
every other device.
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Mesh
Mesh
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Mesh (cont’d)
Advantages
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Mesh (cont’d)
Disadvantages
are related to the amount of cabling and the number
of I/O ports
because every device must be connected to every other
device, installation and reconfiguration are difficult
the sheer bulk of the wiring can be greater than the available
space(in walls, ceiling, or floors) can accommodate
the hardware required to connect each link (I/O port and cable)
can be prohibitively expensive
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Star Topology
Each device has a dedicated point-to-point link only to a central
controller, usually called a hub
Star Topology
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Star (cont’d)
Advantage
Each device needs only one link and one I/O port to connect it
to any number of others (easy to install and reconfigure)
Robustness
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Tree Topology
passive hub
provides a simple physical connection between the
attached devices
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Bus Topology
Bus topology is multipoint. One long cable acts as a backbone to
link all the devices in the network
Nodes are connected to the bus cable by drop lines and taps
Drop line
is a connection running between the device and the main
cable
Tap
is a connector either splices into the main cable or
punctures the sheathing of a cable to create a contact with
the metallic core
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Bus Topology (cont’d)
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Bus (cont’d)
Advantages
include ease of installation
Disadvantages
include difficult reconfiguration and fault isolation
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Ring Topology
Each device has a dedicated point-to-point line configuration only
with the two devices on either side of it
Advantage
Disadvantage
unidirectional traffic
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Hybrid Topology
A network can be hybrid.
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Categories of Networks
Three primary categories
size, ownership, distance it cover, physical architecture
Network
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LAN (Local Area Networks)
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Categories of Networks (cont’d)
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Categories of Networks (cont’d)
MAN (Metropolitan Area Networks)
is designed to extend over an entire city
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Categories of Networks (cont’d)
WAN(Wide Area networks)
provides long-distance transmission of data, voice, image, and
video information over large geographical areas that may
comprise a country, a continent, or even the whole world
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Categories of Networks (cont’d)
Figure 1.11 WANs: a switched WAN and a point-to-point WAN
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Interconnection of Networks : Internetwork
Two or more networks are connected, they become an internet.
Figure 1.12 A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LANs
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1.3 THE INTERNET
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Internet
A Brief History
Internet (not internet)
ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency: ARPA) – mid-1960s
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) in the DOD : presented ideas
of ARPANET, 1967
Reality : 1969 (UCLA, UCSB, SRI, U of Utah)
Birth of Internet : in 1972
Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn : Internetting Project
TCP/IP : A paper by Cerf and Kahn in 1973
In 1983, TCP/IP became to official protocol for the ARPANET
MILNET : in 1983
CSNET, NSFNET, ANSNET, …
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Internet Today
1969. Four-node ARPANET established.
2006 GENI (Global Environment for Network Innovations) for Future Internet
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Internet Today
Figure 1.13 Hierarchical organization of the Internet
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1-4 PROTOCOLS AND STANDARDS
Entity
Protocol
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Protocol & Standards (cont’d)
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Standards
Standards( 표준 )
Standards
De facto De jure
(by fact) (by law)
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Standards Organizations ( 표준화 기구 )
created in 1947
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Standards Organizations (cont’d)
telecommunications.
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Standards Organizations (cont’d)
ANSI (American National Standard Institute)
is a nonprofit organization and is the U.S. voting
representative to be both the ISO and the ITU-T
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Standards Organizations (cont’d)
Forums
Regulatory agencies
FCC (Federal Communications Commission)
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Internet Standards
Internet standard by IETF (Internet Engineering Task
Force)
is a thoroughly tested specification that is useful to and
adhered by those who work with the Internet
by fact standard
~ are often established originally by manufactures seeking to define the
functionality of a new product or technology.
proprietary (closed)
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Standards Organizations (cont’d)
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Summary (1)
Data communications are the transfer of data from one device to another
via some form of transmission medium.
The five components that make up a data communications system are the
message, sender, receiver, medium, and protocol.
Text, numbers, images, audio, and video are different forms of information.
Data flow between two devices can occur in one of three ways: simplex,
half-duplex, or full-duplex.
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Summary (2)
Topology refers to the physical or logical arrangement of a network.
Devices may be arranged in a mesh, star, bus, or ring topology.
The ISO, ITU-T, ANSI, IEEE, and EIA are some of the organizations
involved in standards creation.
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Q&A
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