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Introduction to Computer Systems

Introduction to Computer Systems. Networking Fundamentals Dr. E.C. Kulasekere University of Moratuwa. Network Technology. Connectivity to other computers. Expands the capability of a PC. Satisfies sharing of resources. Expands human communication. Increases security threats.

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Introduction to Computer Systems

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  1. Introduction to Computer Systems Networking Fundamentals Dr. E.C. Kulasekere University of Moratuwa

  2. Network Technology • Connectivity to other computers. • Expands the capability of a PC. • Satisfies sharing of resources. • Expands human communication. • Increases security threats. • Concurrency effects. 2

  3. Modem for Home Connectivity • Most common mode of HAN connection. • Some issues related to modems. • Speed: maximum speed 56K • Needs dial up for connection. • Telephone line usage while on modem. • Price is not to high compared to other services. • Needs reconnection when the link dies. 3

  4. Other Methods of Connectivity • Cable modem. • DSL • Wireless • Satellite-based services. • ISDN • Leased Lines • All of these are categorized as broadband. Data rates exceeding 128kbps. 4

  5. Home Connection Infrastructure • Modem/NIC/DSL • Modem interface. • ISP/POTS. • Switch/Router. • Internet/PSTN • Then the sequence is inverted. • The links maybe digital or analog. 5

  6. Cable Modems (Using CATV Services) • This is a piggyback on a cable TV service. • Faster than ISDN (128 Kbps). • Uses a crossover cable with RJ45 connector. • The fiber-coax cable configuration (fig) • Not found in Sri Lanka. 6

  7. Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) • Uses existing POTS to provide a high speed connection. • Low cost alternative to ISDN. • The connection sharing is more efficient than cable modems. (fig19.2) • Common types ADSL and SDSL. • Advantageous and disadvantages of DSL/SDSL • Low-pass filters are used to isolate the TP signal from DSL signal. • ..\webDocs\DSL.htm 7

  8. Wireless Broadband • Used for home users that are out of reach from POTS. • Should not be confused with wireless internet services provided for PDAs and mobile phones. • Uses microwaves (fig 19.3) • Uses routers and modems (fig 19.4) 8

  9. Integrated Services Digital network (ISDN) • Uses digital signals on the POTS. • Mostly designed for leased lines. • Configuration allows for multiple type of terminations (fig 19.7) • Uses a terminal adapter (TA) for termination and it is not a modem. • Costs more than DSL. 9

  10. Leased Lines • For uses with high bandwidth requirements such as businesses. • Leased line is 24 hour permanent connection which can only be changed by the TP company (what about DSL?) • T1 line 1.5Mbps, T3 line 45Mbps. • The BW is split among users by the ISP. • Used for connection that has high utilization. 10

  11. Sharing Internet Connections • One connection may not be enough for small-office and home (SOHO) systems. • Windows 98SE, ME, 2K and XP have built in internet connection sharing (ICS) gateway software (fig 19.12) • Routers can also be used for internet sharing (fig 19.13/14) 11

  12. Types of Networks • LAN: The smallest office network is referred too as a LAN • HAN: LAN in a home environment is called a HAN. Used for internet connection sharing. • WAN: LANS at different places can be hooked by a WAN. • The Internet: A network of LAN/WAN networks. • Intranets: One or more LANs in a SOHO environment is called an intranet. • Extranets: Intranets that share a part of the network with customers 12

  13. Requirements of a Network • Physical cable or wireless connection. • A common set of communication rules called network protocols. • A software to enable transactions called a network operating system. • Resources that can be shared. • Software that enables computers to access other computers with shared resources: a network client. 13

  14. Components of a network 14

  15. Network Components • Local area networks contain three basic hardware components • Servers (also called hosts or host computers) • Clients • Circuits • Clients and Servers typically work together in client-server networks. Networks without servers are called peer-to-peer networks. • Routers are specialized devices responsible for moving information between networks, are also a common network component. • Server types: file servers, print servers, Web servers, e-mail and directory servers. 15

  16. Network Categorization According to Distance • A common way of thinking about networks is by the scale of the network. 3 common network types are: • Local Area Networks (LANs) which typically occupy a room or building, usually include a group of PCs that share a circuit. • Backbone Networks, have a scale of a few hundred meters to a few kilometers. Include a high speed backbone linking the LANs at various locations. • Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) which typically have a scale of a few kilometers to a few tens of kilometers & connects LANs and BNs at different locations, often using leased lines or other commercial services to transmit data. • Wide Area Networks (WANs) have a scale of hundreds or thousands of kilometers. Like MANs, leased circuits or other commercially available services are used to transmit data. 16

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  18. LAN Topologies 18

  19. Bus Topology • These are the earliest networks. • Single cable (coaxial) is used with terminations at end. • If some part of the cable malfunctioned, since the termination is lost the connections are lost. • Adding a new computer was troublesome. 19

  20. Ring Topology • This is a bus with the two ends connected. No termination necessary. • Examples are fiber distributed data interface (FDDI) used for large high speed networks. • Token ring (IBM) is another example. • Is SeaMeWe an example? • Signals go in a ring and get absorbed at the sender terminal. • Malfunction of ring results in failure (solution: Fig 20.11) 20

  21. Star Topology • Most popular type used today. • Uses UTP cables to patch panel. • Example implementation is a hub. • Failure in one link is not catastrophic. • For fast Ethernet this is the most commonly used type of configuration. • CAT3 (10MB) or CAT5 (100MB) cables are used. 21

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  23. High Speed Networking • Switched Ethernet • Fast Ethernet • 100Base-T • Gigabit Ethernet: Used with fiber optic cables. Can use CAT5 cable. Also referred to as 1000Base-T. • ATM 23

  24. Switched Ethernet • Switched Ethernet relies on centralized multiport switches to provide a physical link between multiple LAN segments • The switch is intelligent and switches between segments with maximum BW allocation. • It’s a cost-effective technique for increasing the overall network throughput and reducing congestion on a 10-Mbps network. • The infrastructure is the same as usual. 24

  25. 100Base-T • 100BASE-T retains the familiar CSMA/CD media access technique used in 10-Mbps Ethernet networks. Hence network management system need not be rewritten. • Supports a broad range of cabling options. CAT5 UTP, Type 1 STP or duplex multimode fiber cable. • It can easily be integrated into existing 10-Mbps Ethernet LANs, so your previous investment is saved 25

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  28. ATM • cell-based fast-packet communication technique that supports data-transfer rates ranging from sub-T1 speeds (less than 1.544 Mbps) up to 10 Gbps • An ATM network can be treated as a single network, whether it connects points in a building or across the country • The fixed cell length signaling method offers predictable performance. • Can be integrated into the existing network. 28

  29. Gigabit Ethernet • The Gigabit Ethernet standard was approved in June 1998, and its speed of 1 Gbps is a tenfold increase over Fast Ethernet. • two basic types: shared and switched. • Shared Gigabit Ethernet is a higher-speed version of 10/100BASE-T using CSMA/CD Medium Access Control • Switched Gigabit Ethernet uses Logical Link Control (LLC) • Its primary use is for backbones. The medium is fiber or Category 5e 100-ohm cable. 29

  30. More on Wireless Networking • Advantages • Flexibility in installing • Flexibility in usage (movement of PCs) • Disadvantages • Security is not so good. • Interference from other devices. 30

  31. Adhoc Wireless Networks • Inexpensive and flexible. • Each workstation relates on a peer-to-peer basis with the other PCs. • You can add a wireless router to gain access to the internet if required. • Only suitable for small networks where security is not an issue. 31

  32. Adhoc Wireless network 32

  33. Infrastructure Mode Wireless Network • Larger installations in larger buildings. • Depends on access points connected together. • Each workstation communicates with the access point rather than directly with another workstation. • May not offer BW for networks with heavy traffic. • Security is still a concern. 33

  34. Infrastructure mode wireless network 34

  35. Completely wired network 35

  36. Integrated Network 36

  37. Fiber Optic Networks • Fiber optic cable is used in applications that require high BW, long distances, and complete immunity to electrical interference. • A common application for fiber optic cable is as a network backbone 37

  38. Fiber Optic Networks (Cont …) • Greater BW. Eg. two million telephone conversations have been simultaneously transmitted over a single fiber using Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (WDM). • Low attenuation, longer distances: less repeaters are used so cost effective. • Security:It’s very easy to monitor taps. If tapped, the cable leaks light, causing the entire system to fail. • Immunity to interference. 38

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  40. Cables • Most commonly used are the (unshielded twisted pair) UTP cables. • The need for better cabling is tied down to the increase in speeds and BW that is required for todays' applications. 40

  41. CAT5 Cabling • Category 5 (CAT5) cabling is good, solid cable for 100-Mbps LANs • Category 5 standard has been around since 1991 • If you still have a lot of 10-Mbps equipment, CAT5 cabling will serve your needs. Also handles 100Mbps fast ethernet as well. • If you are hitting the limit at 100Mpbs upgrade to CAT5e. 41

  42. CAT5e Cabling • Enhanced Cat 5, was ratified in 1999. • It’s an incremental improvement designed to enable cabling to support full-duplex Fast Ethernet operation and Gigabit Ethernet. • CAT5e has stricter specifications for PS-ELFEXT (Power Sum Equal-Level Far-End Crosstalk), NEXT (Near-End Crosstalk), Attenuation, and Return Loss (RL) than those for Category 5 • This is also a 100MHz standard. 42

  43. CAT6 Cabling • Features more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise. Ratified in 2002. • to transmit according to CAT6 specs, jacks, patch cables, patch panels, cross-connects, and cabling must all meet CAT6 standards • all CAT6 components must be backward compatible with CAT5e, CAT5, and Category 3. • if CAT6 cable is used with CAT5e jacks, the channel will perform at a CAT5e level. 43

  44. Cable Standards 44

  45. Cabinets and Racks • A cabinet is an enclosure with a door (or doors); a rack is an open frame • An enclosed cabinet can be locked with a simple lock and key • Fans are installed to cool. • Built in power cabling. • Cabling infrastructure provided. 45

  46. Connectors/Data Interfaces • ..\webDocs\Connector Guide.htm • Connectors are important for the cabling infrastructure. • If two types of connectors are mixed. The lower speed one will set the limit of operation. • ..\webDocs\Data Interfaces.htm 46

  47. LAN Hardware • In traditional LANs, only one network node transmits data at a time while all other stations listen. This can lead to timing requirements not satisfied for video tx etc. • bridges and routers process data packets on an individual basis, switches maintain multiple, simultaneous data conversions among attached LANs • Switched circuits are better since they are dedicated connections. 47

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  49. Switch Technologies • The switch you have to buy for the LAN depends on the type of switching that have to be carried out. • ..\webDocs\Layer 2, 3, and 4 Switching Overview.htm • In depth analysis of such switches will be done next year. 49

  50. Routers and Bridges • Routers and bridges link two or more individual Local Area Networks (LANs) to create an extended-network LAN or Wide Area Network (WAN). 50

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