1 / 32

ITC242 – Introduction to Data Communications Week 8 Topic 13 Wireless WANS Reading 2

ITC242 – Introduction to Data Communications Week 8 Topic 13 Wireless WANS Reading 2. Topic 12 – Circuit/Packet switching. Learning Objectives Define and describe the characteristics of: Circuit switched network Packet switched network

cora-vinson
Download Presentation

ITC242 – Introduction to Data Communications Week 8 Topic 13 Wireless WANS Reading 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ITC242 – Introduction to Data CommunicationsWeek 8Topic 13 Wireless WANSReading 2

  2. Topic 12 – Circuit/Packet switching Learning Objectives • Define and describe the characteristics of: • Circuit switched network • Packet switched network • Describe the application of both circuit switching and packet switching networks • Compare Circuit/packet switched networks describing the advantages and disadvantages of each.

  3. mesh of interconnected routers the fundamental question: how is data transferred through net? circuit switching: dedicated circuit per call: telephone net packet-switching: data sent thru net in discrete “chunks” The Network Core

  4. End-end resources reserved for “call” link bandwidth, switch capacity dedicated resources: no sharing circuit-like (guaranteed) performance call setup required Network Core: Circuit Switching

  5. network resources (e.g., bandwidth) divided into “pieces” pieces allocated to calls resource piece idle if not used by owning call (no sharing) Network Core: Circuit Switching • dividing link bandwidth into “pieces” • frequency division • time division

  6. Example: 4 users FDM frequency time TDM frequency time Circuit Switching: FDM and TDM

  7. Circuit Switching Applications • Public Telephone Network (PSTN) • Private Automatic Branch Exchanges (PABX / PBX) • Private Wide Area Networks (often used to interconnect PBXs in a single organization) • Data Switch

  8. each end-end data stream divided into packets user A, B packets share network resources each packet uses full link bandwidth resources used as needed Bandwidth division into “pieces” Dedicated allocation Resource reservation Network Core: Packet Switching resource contention: • aggregate resource demand can exceed amount available • congestion: packets queue, wait for link use • store and forward: packets move one hop at a time • Node receives complete packet before forwarding

  9. store and forward: entire packet must arrive at router before it can be transmitted on next link Packet-switching: store-and-forward L R R R

  10. packets queue in router buffers packet arrival rate to link exceeds output link capacity packets queue, wait for turn packet being transmitted (delay) packets queueing (delay) free (available) buffers: arriving packets dropped (loss) if no free buffers Delay and loss in packet-switched networks A B

  11. 1. nodal processing: check bit errors determine output link transmission A propagation B nodal processing queueing Four sources of packet delay • 2. queueing • time waiting at output link for transmission • depends on congestion level of router

  12. 3. Transmission delay: R=link bandwidth (bps) L=packet length (bits) time to send bits into link = L/R 4. Propagation delay: d = length of physical link s = propagation speed in medium (~2x108 m/sec) propagation delay = d/s transmission A propagation B nodal processing queueing Delay in packet-switched networks Note: s and R are very different quantities!

  13. cars “propagate” at 100 km/hr toll booth takes 12 sec to service car (transmission time) car~bit; caravan ~ packet Q: How long until caravan is lined up before 2nd toll booth? Time to “push” entire caravan through toll booth onto highway = 12*10 = 120 sec Time for last car to propagate from 1st to 2nd toll both: 100km/(100km/hr)= 1 hr A: 62 minutes 100 km 100 km ten-car caravan toll booth toll booth Caravan analogy

  14. Topic 13 – Wireless WANs Learning Objectives • Describe the properties and applications of the different types of satellite communications.

  15. Satellite Communications • Two or more stations on or near the earth communicate via one or more satellites that serve as relay stations in space • The antenna systems on or near the earth are referred to as earth stations • Transmission from an earth station to the satellite is an uplink, from the satellite to the earth station is downlink • The transponder in the satellite takes an uplink signal and converts it to a downlink signal

  16. Satellite Network

  17. Geostationary Satellites • Circular orbit 35,838 km above the earth’s surface • Rotates in the equatorial plane of the earth at exactly the same angular speed as the earth • Remains above the same spot on the equator as the earth rotates

  18. Advantages of Geostationary Orbits • Satellite is stationary relative to the earth, so no frequency changes due to the relative motion of the satellite and antennas on earth (Doppler effect). • Tracking of the satellite by its earth stations is simplified. • One satellite can communicate with roughly a fourth of the earth; three satellites separated by 120° cover most of the inhabited portions of the entire earth excluding only the areas near the north and south poles

  19. Problems withGeostationary Orbits • Signal can weaken after traveling that distance • Polar regions and the far northern and southern hemispheres are poorly served • Even at speed of light, the delay in sending a signal 35,838 km each way to the satellite and back is substantial

  20. LEO and MEO Orbits • Alternatives to geostationary orbits • LEO: Low earth orbiting • MEO: Medium earth orbiting

  21. Satellite Orbits

  22. LEO Advantages • Reduced propagation delay • Received LEO signal is much stronger than that of GEO signals for the same transmission power • LEO coverage can be better localized so that spectrum can be better conserved. • On the other hand, to provide broad coverage over 24 hours, many satellites are needed.

  23. Satellite Network Applications • Television distribution • Long-distance telephone transmission • Private business networks • Military applications

  24. Reading 2 – Wide Area and Large-Scale Networks Learning Objectives • Describe the basic concepts associated with wide area networks • Identify the uses, benefits, and drawbacks of WAN technologies such as ATM, FDDI, SONET, SMDS

  25. WAN Transmission Technologies Some of the communication links employed to construct WANs include: • Packet-switching networks • Fibre-optic cable • Microwave transmitters • Satellite links • Cable television coax systems

  26. WAN Transmission Technologies Three primary technologies are used to transmit communications between LANs across WAN links: • Analogue • Digital • Packet switching

  27. Analogue Connectivity • PSTN – Public Switched Telephone Network • POTS – Plain Old Telephone System

  28. Digital Connectivity • DDS – Digital Data Service: point-to-point, low data rates • E1 – high speed digital lines: 2.048Mbps = 30 x 64kbps voice channels + 2 x 64kbps signalling channels. • X.25: an interface between public packet switched networks and customers. • Frame Relay: point-to-point permanent virtual circuit technology.

  29. Digital Connectivity ISDN – Integrated Services Digital Network: • BRI: Basic Rate Interface: consists of 2 B channels (64kbps each) – bearer channels for data, and one D channel (16Kbps) for setup and control. 2B+D • PRI: In Australia 30 B channels (64Kbps each) and 2 D channels (64Kbps each). 30B+2D

  30. Advanced WAN Technologies • ATM: Asynchronous Transfer Mode: high speed, packet-switching. Uses fixed sized cells of 53 bytes. High levels of quality of service to allow for different data types. • SONET: Synchronous Optical Network: high speed Fibre optic WAN technology

More Related