Lecture 4 Ethernet and Wireless Local Area Networks 4482
Lecture 4 Ethernet and Wireless Local Area Networks 4482
Ethernet
LAN standards development is done primarily by the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
IEEE created the 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee for LAN standards (the 802 Committee)
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The 802 Committee creates working groups for specific types of standards
802.1 for general standards 802.3 for Ethernet standards The terms 802.3 and Ethernet are interchangeable 802.11 for wireless LAN standards
100 meters 4-pair Category 3 or higher 100 meters 4-pair Category 5 or higher
100BASE-TX dominates access links today. Although 1000BASE-T is growing in access links today 4
The 1000BASE-SX standard dominates trunk links today. Carriers use 1310 and 1550 nm light and single-mode fiber. 5
Gigabit Ethernet
10 Gbps Ethernet usage is small but growing Several 10 Gbps 10GBASE-x fiber standards are defined, but none is dominant Copper is cheaper than fiber but cannot go as far
UTP
UTP
No Communication
Switch 1
C3-2D-55-3B-A9-4F
Switch 3
B2-CD-13-5B-E4-65 A1-44-D5-1F-AA-4C
D4-47-55-C4-B6-9F E5-BB-47-21-D3-56 9
Hierarchy Implications
Single possible path between stations. Makes switching tables very simple because there is only one possible row for each address. Find the row, send the frame out the indicated port. Very fast, so minimizes switching cost.
A frame comes in one port The switch looks up the frames destination MAC address in the switching table The switch sends the frame out a single port Only two ports are tied up
Ethernet 10Base2
NIC
To Next Station
Ethernet 10Base2
T-connector
To next station
BNC connector
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Server broadcast NO
Client A on VLAN1
Server D on VLAN2
Server E on VLAN1 15
Traffic
Network capacity
Momentary traffic peaks usually last fraction of a second; They occasionally exceed the networks capacity. When they do, frames will be delayed, even dropped.
Time
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Overprovisioning: Build high capacity than will rarely if ever be exceeded. This wastes capacity. But cheaper than using priority.
Time 17
Network capacity
Momentary peak
Priority: During momentary peaks, give priority to traffic that is intolerant of delay, such as voice. No need to overprovision, but expensive to implement. Ongoing management is very expensive.
Time
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If a routed LAN links multiple Ethernet switched networks, the switched networks are called subnets
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Wireless LANs
Today, mostly speeds of tens of megabits per second with distances of 30 to 100 meters or more Can serve many users in a home or office Increasingly,100 Mbps to 600 Mbps with 802.11n Organizations can provide coverage throughout a building or a university campus by installing many access points
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Transmission speed: up to 300 Mbps but usually 10 Mbps to 100 Mbps. Distances between station and access point: 300 to 100 meters. 22
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802.11 uses a different frame format than 802.3 The access point translates between the two frame formats However, the packet goes all the way between the two hosts 24
The access point and all the hosts it servers transmit in a single channel
If two devices transmit at the same time, their signals will collide, becoming unreasonable
Media access control (MAC) methods govern when a device may transmit; It only lets one device transmit at a time
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MAC methods govern when devices transmit so that only one station or the access point can transmit at a time To control access (transmission), two methods can be used
CSMA/CA+ACK (mandatory) RTS/CTS (optional unless 802.11b and g stations share an 802.11g access point)
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Sender listens for traffic 1. If there is traffic, waits 2. If there is no traffic: 2a. If there has been no traffic for less than the critical time value, waits a random amount of time, then returns to Step 1. 2b, If there has been no traffic for more than the critical value for time, sends without waiting This avoids collision that would result if hosts could transmit as soon as one host finishes transmitting 27
ACK (Acknowledgement)
Receiver immediately sends back an acknowledgement; no waiting because ACKs have highest priority. If sender does not receive the acknowledgement, retransmits the frame using CSMA/CA.
802.11 with CSMA/CA+ACK is a reliable protocol!
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Unlicensed Band
2.4 GHz
Remarks
2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Little Bloomed Todays Get rid of Greater market briefly dominant old speed accep802.11 802.11b and tance standard distance equip.
5 GHz
2.4 GHz
2.4 GHz
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802.11g
Most popular 802.11 standard today 54 Mbps rated speed with much slower throughput Generally sufficient for Web browsing Inexpensive
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802.11n
Under development
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Bluetooth PANs
May overlap
PANs are called piconets
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File synchronization Client PC slave Note: Printer is in both piconets; Slave has two masters.
Printing
Printer slave
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Focus
Speed
Large WLANs
11 Mbps to 54 Mbps In both directions 100 meters for 802.11b (but shorter in reality) Even shorter of 802.11a
Distance
Profiles allow specific products to work together. Different profiles for printing, cordless telephones, headsets, etc. Must be implemented on both master and slave.
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Bluetooth PANS
Trends
This should raise speed to 100 Mbps (or more) Transmission distance will remain limited to 10 meters Good for distributing television within a house
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In mesh wireless networks, the access points do all routing There is no need for a wired network The 802.11s standard for mesh networking is under development This P2P networking needs high density of devices
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Ultrawideband (UWB)
Low power per hertz to avoid interference with other services Wide bandwidth gives very high speeds But limited to short distance and ideal for video networking at home Wireless USB provides 480 Mbps up to 3 meters, 110 Mbps up to 10 meters
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Like UPC tags but readable remotely In most cases, the radio signal from the reader provides power for the RFID tag The RFID tag uses this power to send information about itself Battery-operated RFID tags can send farther and send more information 30-500 KHz, short distances, for supermarket scanning and inventory control 850-950 MHz, large distances, higher speed, for automated toll collection 44
Software-Defined Radio
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