Practical File of Computer Networks
Practical File of Computer Networks
File
of
Computer
Networks
Submitted To:
Mr. Harikesh
Submitted By:
LAN networks are also widely used to share resources like printers,
shared hard-drive etc.
Wireless Network
It is the fastest growing segment of computer. They are becoming very
important in our daily life because wind connections are not possible in
cars or Aeroplane. We can access Internet at any place avoiding wire
related troubles.. These can be used also when the telephone systems
gets destroyed due to some calamity/disaster. WANs are really important
now-a-days.
Inter Network
When we connect two or more networks then they are called internetwork
or internet. We can join two or more individual networks to form an
internetwork through devices like routers gateways or bridges.
BUS Topology
Bus topology is a network type in where every computer and network
device is connected to single cable.
RING Topology
It is called ring topology because it forms a ring as each computer is
connected to another computer, with the last one connected to the first.
Exactly two neighbours for each device.
STAR Topology
In this type of topology all the computers are connected to a single hub
through a cable. This hub is the central node and all others nodes are
connected to the central node.
MESH Topology
It is a point-to-point connection to other nodes or devices. Traffic is
carried only between two devices or nodes to which it is connected. Mesh
has n (n-2)/2 physical channels to link hn devices.
HYBRID Topology
2. Costly.
Advantages :
Installation is easy
Flexible
Cheap
It has high speed capacity,
100 meter limit
Higher grades of UTP are used in LAN technologies like Ethernet.
It consists of two insulating copper wires (1mm thick). The wires are
twisted together in a helical form to reduce electrical interference from
similar pair.
Disadvantages :
Bandwidth is low when compared with Coaxial Cable
Provides less protection from interference.
This cable has a metal foil or braided-mesh covering which encases each
pair of insulated conductors. Electromagnetic noise penetration is
prevented by metal casing. Shielding also eliminates crosstalk (explained
in KEY TERMS Chapter).
It has same attenuation as unshielded twisted pair. It is faster the
unshielded and coaxial cable. It is more expensive than coaxial and
unshielded twisted pair.
Advantages :
Easy to install
Performance is adequate
Can be used for Analog or Digital transmission
Increases the signalling rate
Higher capacity than unshielded twisted pair
Eliminates crosstalk
Disadvantages :
Difficult to manufacture
Heavy
Coaxial Cable
Coaxial is called by this name because it contains two conductors that are
parallel to each other. Copper is used in this as centre conductor which
can be a solid wire or a standard one. It is surrounded by PVC installation,
a sheath which is encased in an outer conductor of metal foil, barid or
both.
Outer metallic wrapping is used as a shield against noise and as the second
conductor which completes the circuit. The outer conductor is also
encased in an insulating sheath. The outermost part is the plastic cover
which protects the whole cable.
Here the most common coaxial standards.
50-Ohm RG-7 or RG-11 : used with thick Ethernet.
50-Ohm RG-58 : used with thin Ethernet
75-Ohm RG-59 : used with cable television
93-Ohm RG-62 : used with ARCNET.
BaseBand
This is a 50 ohm () coaxial cable which is used for digital transmission.
It is mostly used for LANs. Baseband transmits a single signal at a time
with very high speed. The major drawback is that it needs amplification
after every 1000 feet.
BroadBand
This uses analog transmission on standard cable television cabling. It
transmits several simultaneous signal using different frequencies. It
covers large area when compared with Baseband Coaxial Cable.
Advantages :
Bandwidth is high
Used in long distance telephone lines.
Transmits digital signals at a very high rate of 10Mbps.
Much higher noise immunity
Data transmission without distortion.
The can span to longer distance at higher speeds as they have
better shielding when compared to twisted pair cable
Disadvantages :
Single cable failure can fail the entire network.
Difficult to install and expensive when compared with twisted pair.
If the shield is imperfect, it can lead to grounded loop.
Advantages :
Provides high quality transmission of signals at very high speed.
These are not affected by electromagnetic interference, so noise
and distortion is very less.
Used for both analog and digital signals.
Disadvantages :
It is expensive
Difficult to install.
Maintenance is expensive and difficult.
Do not allow complete routing of light signals.
Radio Transmission
Its frequency is between 10 kHz to 1GHz. It is simple to install and has
high attenuation. These waves are used for multicast communications.
Types of Propogation
Radio Transmission utilizes different types of propogation :
Troposphere : The lowest portion of earths atmosphere extending
outward approximately 30 miles from the earths surface. Clouds,
jet planes, wind is found here.
Ionosphere : The layer of the atmosphere above troposphere, but
below space. Contains electrically charged particles.
Microwave Transmission
It travels at high frequency than the radio waves. It requires the sender
to be inside of the receiver. It operates in a system with a low gigahertz
range. It is mostly used for unicast communication.
Advantages of Microwave Transmission
Used for long distance telephone communication
Routers
A router is a communications device that connects multiple computers or
other routers togehter and transmits data to its correct destination on
the network. A router can be used on any size of network. On the largest
scale, routers along the Internet backbone forward data packets to their
destination using the fastest available path.
Modems
A modem links your home entwork to the Internet through your Internet
Service Provider (ISP). The high speed types o data outside o your home
arnt suitable or your direct use, so modems convert the data into digital
Ethernet, which all the network equipment in your home can use.
Switch
A switch or network switch is a small hardware device that joins multiple
computers togethern within one Local Area Network (LAN). Technically,
network switches operate at layer two (Data Link Layer) o the OSI Model.
Network switches appear nearly identical to network hubs, but a switch
generally contains more intelligence (and a slightly higher price tag) than a
hub. Unlike hubs, network switches are capable of inspecting data packets
as they are received, determining the source and destination device of
each packet, and forwarding them appropriately. By delivering messages
only to the connected device intended, a network switch
conserves network bandwidth and offers generally better performance
than a hub.
Repeater
A repeater connects two segments of your network cable. It retimes and
regenerates the signals to proper amplitudes and sends them to other
segments. When talking about, ethernet topology, you are probably talking
about using a hub as a repeater. Repeaters require a small amount o time
to regenerate the signal. This can cause a propagation delay which can
affect network communication when there are several repeaters in a row.
IP Address basics
"IP" stands for Internet Protocol, so an IP address is an Internet
Protocol address. What does that mean? An Internet Protocol is a set of
rules that govern Internet activity and facilitate completion of a variety
of actions on the World Wide Web. Therefore an Internet Protocol
address is part of the systematically laid out interconnected grid that
governs online communication by identifying both initiating devices and
various Internet destinations, thereby making two-way communication
possible.
An IP address consists of four numbers, each of which contains one to
three digits, with a single dot (.) separating each number or set of digits.
Each of the four numbers can range from 0 to 255. Here's an example of
what an IP address might look like: 78.125.0.209. This innocuous-looking
group of four numbers is the key that empowers you and me to send and
retrieve data over our Internet connections, ensuring that our messages,
as well as our requests for data and the data we've requested, will reach
their correct Internet destinations. Without this numeric protocol,
sending and receiving data over the World Wide Web would be impossible.
IP addresses can be either static or dynamic. Static IP addresses never
change. They serve as a permanent Internet address and provide a simple
and reliable way for remote computers to contact you. Static IP
addresses reveal such information as the continent, country, region, and
city in which a computer is located; the ISP (Internet Service Provider)
that services that particular computer; and such technical information as
the precise latitude and longitude of the country, as well as the locale, of
the computer. Many websites provide IP address look-up services to their
visitors, free of charge. If you're curious about your own IP address, you
can locate these websites by performing a Google search.
host
host(1) can do this for us. host is used to map names to IP addresses. It is
a very quick and simple utility without a lot of functions.
nslookup
nslookup is a tried and true program that has weathered the
ages. nslookup has been deprecated and may be removed from future
releases. There is not even a man page for this program.
finger
finger(1) will retrieve information about the specified user. You give
finger a username or an email address and it will try to contact the
necessary server and retrieve the username, office, telephone number,
and other pieces of information.
telnet
Someone once stated that telnet(1) was the coolest thing he had ever
0seen on computers. The ability to remotely log in and do stuff on another
computer is what separates Unix and Unix-like operating systems from
other operating systems.
telnet allows you to log in to a computer, just as if you were sitting at the
terminal. Once your username and password are verified, you are given a
shell prompt. From here, you can do anything requiring a text console.
Compose email, read newsgroups, move files around, and so on. If you are
running X and you telnet to another machine, you can run X programs on
the remote computer and display them on yours.
ipconfig
The ipconfig command is used on Windows, while the ifconfig command is
used on Linux, Mac OS X, and other Unix-like operating systems. These
commands allow you to configure your network interfaces and view
information about them.
netstat
netstat stands for network statistics. This command displays incoming and
outgoing network connections as well as other network information. Its
available on Windows, Mac, and Linux each version has its own
command-line options you can tweak to see different types of information.