1 / 25

PERSONAL INFORMATION :-

PERSONAL INFORMATION :-. SHEIKH MOHSIN JAMEEL (1421-311070) WASEEM AKHTER (1421-1111111) MASUD (1421-1111111) SHUJAT (1421-1111111). PRESTON UNIVERSITY ISLAMABAD. CHAPTER 4 :. ETHERNET. ETHERNET :-. Definition Connetion of number of system. Background 1972 Robert Metcalf

vinny
Download Presentation

PERSONAL INFORMATION :-

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. PERSONAL INFORMATION:- • SHEIKH MOHSIN JAMEEL • (1421-311070) • WASEEM AKHTER • (1421-1111111) • MASUD • (1421-1111111) • SHUJAT • (1421-1111111) PRESTON UNIVERSITY ISLAMABAD.

  2. CHAPTER 4: ETHERNET

  3. ETHERNET:- • Definition • Connetion of number of system. • Background • 1972 Robert Metcalf • David Boffs at Xeror PRODUCTION OF ETHERNET: • First Ethernet Specification • 100 computers at 3 Mbps • 1990 Ethernet Specification • IEEE 802.3 specification at 10 Mbps

  4. HOW ETHERNET WORKS: • Ethernet access: • CSMA/CD • Example: • Old party-line telephone system.

  5. ETHERNET CABLING SYSTEM: • 10 Mbps Ethernet: • 10base5 or thicknet • 10base2 or thinnet • 10baseT or twisted pair • 10baseFL or fiber optics • 100 Mbps Ethernet: • 100VG-Any LAN • 100BaseT Ethernet

  6. 10Mbps Ethernet: 10base5 Ethernet: • Specifications: • Disadvantages: • Large size • High cost • Connection method

  7. 10BASE2 ETHERNET: • Specifications: • Disadvantages: • Network gets failure by any single broken node • High cost compared to UTP cable • Network unreliable due to BUS configuration

  8. 10BASET ETHERNET: • Specifications:

  9. 10BASEFL ETHERNET: • Specifications:

  10. 100Mbps Ethernet: 100VG-AnyLAN Ethernet: • Specifications: • 100VG-AnyLAN • 100baseVG • VG • AnyLAN • Advantages: • It is faster • It supports both Ethernet and Token Ring packets • It uses a demand priority access method that allows for two priority levels • Hubs can filter individually addressed frames for enhanced privacy • Note: • Categories 3,4 and 5 twisted pair and fiber optics can be use. • Uses Star topology and defines how child hubs can be connected • The length of any two segments must not exceed 250 meters

  11. 100baseT Ethernet: • Specifications: • 100baseT4 (categories 3,4 or 5 UTP or STP) • 100baseTX (category 5 UTP or STP) • 100baseFX (fiber-optic cable) • Note: • 100baseX has the same advantages and drawbacks as 10baseT.

  12. Token Ring: • Definition: • IEEE 802.5 standard • Topology physically like a star • Logically a ring topology • Background: • Developed by IBM as a robust • Highly reliable network • Complex than Ethernet • Self-healing and properties

  13. TOKEN RING: HUBS: • Categories: • MAU(Multi-station Access Unit) • MSAU(Multi-station Smart Access Unit) • SMAU(Smart Multi-station Access unit) • Card Addressing and Settings: • Unique address • maximum two cards installation in single workstation • Uses DIP switch settings • cable connects 9-pin female connector • 4 wires are required to make the connection to each card as UTP cable connection

  14. Token Ring: • Specifications:

  15. How token ring works:- • Token passing • NAUN(nearest active up-neighbour) • NADN(nearest active down-neighbour) • Active monitors • Standby Monitors • Beaconing Advantages:- • reliable under heavy load • built-in diagnostic and recovery mechanisms • connecting a LAN to an IBM mainframe easier • fault-tolerance features through ring wrap Disadvantages:- • token ring cards and equipments are expensive • very difficult to troubleshoot and requires expertise

  16. FDDI(FIBER DISTRIBUSTED DATA INTERFACE): • DEFINITION: • Ring-based network • Implemented without hubs • Uses devices called concentrators • Uses fiber optics to implement very fast, reliable network How FDDI works:- • Token passing scheme • FDDI token passing • Transmitting frames • Synchronous frames • Multi-frame dialogs • Dual counter- rotating rings

  17. ATM(Asynchronous Transfer Mode): • Definition: • Standard switching techniques • Uses asynchronous time-division multi-plexing • Types of Network traffic: • Audio(Voice telephone over short and long distances) • Video (Cable television) • Data (Computer communications in LAN and WAN enviroments)

  18. How ATM works:- • ATM communicates with cells • 53 octets long each cell • Indicates the path the data will flow through • Small cells are used to minimize the latency and make it easy to process Two types of ATM network:- • Permanent Virtual Circuit(PVC) • set-up once • allows communication between two devices • Switching d Virtual Circuit (SVC) • temporarily set-up • just for duration of communication

  19. Classes of service for ATM: • Circuit emulation with constant bit rate • Audio and/or video with a variable bit rate • Connection-oriented service for data transmission • Connectionless service for data transmission

  20. Data transmission speed for ATM:

  21. Apple Talk: • Definition: • Networking architecture • Built into every Macintosh computer • Introduced in 1983 Types of AppleTalk: • LocalTalk • EtherTalkand TokenTalk • Appleshare • Zones

  22. ARCNET: • Definition: • Widely-installed local area network • Managing line sharing among the workstations ARC net Environment: • Classified as a local area network or LAN • Introduced as an office automation LAN by Data point Corporation

  23. How ARC net works:- • ArcNet uses a token-passing access method • Star-bus topology passing data at 2.5 Mbps • Supports data transmission rates of 20 Mbps • ArcNet is a token-passing architecture

  24. THANKYOU

More Related