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Network Hardware and its
Topologies
CSE306
Categories of Networks
• Personal area networks
• Local Area networks
• Metropolitan Area networks
• Wide Area networks
• Wireless Networks
• Home Networks
• Internetworks- The Internet
Personal Area Network
Bluetooth PAN configuration
Local Area Networks (LANs)
– Short distances
– Designed to provide local interconnectivity
Wireless and wired LANs. (a) 802.11. (b) Switched
Ethernet.
Isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a
closet
Wide Area Networks (WANs)
– Long distances
– Provide connectivity over large areas
WANs: a switched WAN and a
point-to-point WAN
1.8
A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LAN
Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs)
• Provide connectivity over areas such as a city, a campus
• A metropolitan area network based on cable TV or telephone
cable using DSL
Wireless Networks
• (a) Bluetooth configuration
• (b) Wireless LAN
Wireless Networks
• (a) Individual mobile computers
• (b) A flying LAN
Home Network Categories
• Computers (desktop PC, PDA, shared peripherals
• Entertainment (TV, DVD, VCR, camera, stereo, MP3)
• Telecomm (telephone, cell phone, intercom, fax)
• Appliances (microwave, fridge, clock, furnace, airco)
• Telemetry (utility meter, burglar alarm, babycam).
THE INTERNET
• Inter connection of two or more networks become an
internet.
• The Internet has revolutionized many aspects of our daily
lives. It has affected the way we do business as well as the
way we spend our leisure time.
• The Internet is a communication system that has brought a
wealth of information to our fingertips and organized it for
our use.
Hierarchical organization of the Internet
Broadcast Networks
• Classification of interconnected processors by scale.
Network Topology
• The topology of a network defines how the nodes of a
network are connected.
• The shape of the cabling layout used to link devices is called
the physical topology of the network.
• The logical topology, in contrast, is the way that the signals
act on the network media, or the way that the data passes
through the network from one device to the next without
regard to the physical interconnection of the devices.
Categories of Physical Topology
Mesh Topology
• Here every device has a point to point link to every
other device.
• Node 1 node must be connected with n-1 nodes.
• A fully connected mesh can have n(n-1)/2 physical
channels to link n devices.
• It must have n-1 I/O ports.
1.19
A fully connected mesh topology (five devices)
Advantages of Mesh
1. They use dedicated links so each link can only carry its
own data load. So traffic problem can be avoided.
2. It is robust. If any one link get damaged it cannot affect
others.
3. It gives privacy and security.(Message travels along a
dedicated link)
4. Fault identification and fault isolation are easy.
Disadvantages of Mesh
1. The amount of cabling and the number of I/O ports
required are very large. Since every device is
connected to each devices through dedicated links.
2. The sheer bulk of wiring is larger then the available
space.
3. Hardware required to connected each device is
highly expensive.
Applications of Mesh
1. Telephone Regional office.
2. WAN.(Wide Area Network).
Star Topology
• Here each device has a dedicated point-to-point link to
the central controller called “Hub”(Act as a
Exchange).
• There is no direct traffic between devices.
• The transmission are occurred only through the central
“hub”.
• When device 1 wants to send data to device 2; First
sends the data to hub. Which then relays the data to
the other connected device.
Star Topology
Advantages of Star Topology
1. Less expensive then mesh since each device is connected
only to the hub.
2. Installation and configuration are easy.
3. Less cabling is need then mesh.
4. Robustness.(if one link fails, only that links is affected.
All other links remain active)
5. Easy to fault identification & to remove parts.
6. No distruptions to the network then connecting(or)
removing devices.
Disadvantages of Star Topology
1. Even it requires less cabling then mesh when
compared with other topologies it still large.(Ring or
bus).
2. Dependency(whole n/w dependent on one single
point(hub). When it goes down. The whole system is
dead.
Applications of Star Topology
• Star topology used in Local Area Networks(LANs).
• High speed LAN often used STAR.
Bus Topology
• A bus topology is multipoint.
• Here one long cable act as a backbone to link all the
devices are connected to the backbone by drop lines
and taps.
• Drop line- is the connection b/w the devices and the
cable.
• Tap- is the splitter that cut the main link.
• This allows only one device to transmit at a time.
Bus Topology
• When a device sends a message, it is broadcast down on the
cable in both directions. Terminators at the end of the cable
prevent the signal from reflecting back to the sender.
• All devices on the cable constantly monitor for messages
meant to them. When a device detects a message meant for
it, it reads the message from the cable and the other devices
will ignore it.
• Since all devices are sharing the same cable, some form of
control is needed to make sure which device will transmit
when, otherwise there will be a collision.
Advantages of Bus Topology
1. Ease of installation.
2. Less cabling.
3. less expensive.
Disadvantages of Bus Topology
1. Difficult reconfiguration and fault isolation.
2. Difficult to add new devices.
3. Signal reflection at top can degradation in quality.
4. If any fault in backbone can stops all transmission.
Applications of Bus Topology
• Most computer motherboard.
Ring Topology
• Here each device has a dedicated connection with two
devices on either side.
• The signal is passed in one direction from device to device
until it reaches the destination and each device have repeater.
• When one device received signals instead of intended
another device, its repeater then regenerates the data and
passes them along.
• To add or delete a device requires changing only two
connections.
Ring Topology
Ring Topology
Advantages:
1. Easy to install.
2. Easy to reconfigure.
3. Fault identification is easy.
Disadvantages:
1. Unidirectional traffic.
2. Break in a single ring can break entire network.
Ring Topology
Applications:
• Ring topologies are found in some office buildings or
school campuses.
• Today high speed LANs made this topology less
popular.
Tree Topology
• Alternatively referred to as a star bus topology.
• Tree topology is one of the most common network setups
that is similar to a bus topology and a star topology.
• A tree topology connects multiple star networks to other star
networks. Below is a visual example of a simple computer
setup on a network using the star topology.
lecture 2,3.pdf
Hybrid Topology
• A network which contain all type of physical
structure and connected under a single
backbone channel.
lecture 2,3.pdf
Hybrid Topology
Considerations for Choosing
Network Topology
• Money-Bus n/w may be the least expensive way to install a n/w.
• Length-of cable needed- the linear bus n/w uses shorter lengths of
cable.
• Future growth-with star topology, expending a n/w is easily done by
adding another devices.
• Cable type-most common used cable in commercial
organization is twisted pair. Which is often used with star
topologies.
• Full mesh topology is theoretically the best since every
device is connected to every other device.(thus
maximizing speed and security. however, it quite
expensive to install)
• Next best would be tree topology , which is basically a
connection of star.
Backbone Networks: Serial Backbone
• Daisy chain: linked series of devices
– Hubs and switches often connected in daisy chain to
extend a network
• Hubs, gateways, routers, switches, and bridges
can form part of backbone
• Extent to which hubs can be connected is limited
Connecting devices
Repeater or hub
A repeater forwards every bit; it has no filtering
capability.
A router is a three-layer (physical, data
link, and network) device.
A repeater or a bridge connects segments of a LAN.
A router connects independent LANs or WANs to
create an internetwork (internet).
Routing example
Hub
• Broadcast
• More collision
• Connect same networking device
Switch
• Switch is intelligent device
• Learning the address
• Forwarding
• Work on mac address
Router
• Connect different networks
• Routing
Ad

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lecture 2,3.pdf

  • 1. Network Hardware and its Topologies CSE306
  • 2. Categories of Networks • Personal area networks • Local Area networks • Metropolitan Area networks • Wide Area networks • Wireless Networks • Home Networks • Internetworks- The Internet
  • 4. Local Area Networks (LANs) – Short distances – Designed to provide local interconnectivity Wireless and wired LANs. (a) 802.11. (b) Switched Ethernet.
  • 5. Isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a closet
  • 6. Wide Area Networks (WANs) – Long distances – Provide connectivity over large areas
  • 7. WANs: a switched WAN and a point-to-point WAN
  • 8. 1.8 A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LAN
  • 9. Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) • Provide connectivity over areas such as a city, a campus • A metropolitan area network based on cable TV or telephone cable using DSL
  • 10. Wireless Networks • (a) Bluetooth configuration • (b) Wireless LAN
  • 11. Wireless Networks • (a) Individual mobile computers • (b) A flying LAN
  • 12. Home Network Categories • Computers (desktop PC, PDA, shared peripherals • Entertainment (TV, DVD, VCR, camera, stereo, MP3) • Telecomm (telephone, cell phone, intercom, fax) • Appliances (microwave, fridge, clock, furnace, airco) • Telemetry (utility meter, burglar alarm, babycam).
  • 13. THE INTERNET • Inter connection of two or more networks become an internet. • The Internet has revolutionized many aspects of our daily lives. It has affected the way we do business as well as the way we spend our leisure time. • The Internet is a communication system that has brought a wealth of information to our fingertips and organized it for our use.
  • 15. Broadcast Networks • Classification of interconnected processors by scale.
  • 16. Network Topology • The topology of a network defines how the nodes of a network are connected. • The shape of the cabling layout used to link devices is called the physical topology of the network. • The logical topology, in contrast, is the way that the signals act on the network media, or the way that the data passes through the network from one device to the next without regard to the physical interconnection of the devices.
  • 18. Mesh Topology • Here every device has a point to point link to every other device. • Node 1 node must be connected with n-1 nodes. • A fully connected mesh can have n(n-1)/2 physical channels to link n devices. • It must have n-1 I/O ports.
  • 19. 1.19 A fully connected mesh topology (five devices)
  • 20. Advantages of Mesh 1. They use dedicated links so each link can only carry its own data load. So traffic problem can be avoided. 2. It is robust. If any one link get damaged it cannot affect others. 3. It gives privacy and security.(Message travels along a dedicated link) 4. Fault identification and fault isolation are easy.
  • 21. Disadvantages of Mesh 1. The amount of cabling and the number of I/O ports required are very large. Since every device is connected to each devices through dedicated links. 2. The sheer bulk of wiring is larger then the available space. 3. Hardware required to connected each device is highly expensive.
  • 22. Applications of Mesh 1. Telephone Regional office. 2. WAN.(Wide Area Network).
  • 23. Star Topology • Here each device has a dedicated point-to-point link to the central controller called “Hub”(Act as a Exchange). • There is no direct traffic between devices. • The transmission are occurred only through the central “hub”. • When device 1 wants to send data to device 2; First sends the data to hub. Which then relays the data to the other connected device.
  • 25. Advantages of Star Topology 1. Less expensive then mesh since each device is connected only to the hub. 2. Installation and configuration are easy. 3. Less cabling is need then mesh. 4. Robustness.(if one link fails, only that links is affected. All other links remain active) 5. Easy to fault identification & to remove parts. 6. No distruptions to the network then connecting(or) removing devices.
  • 26. Disadvantages of Star Topology 1. Even it requires less cabling then mesh when compared with other topologies it still large.(Ring or bus). 2. Dependency(whole n/w dependent on one single point(hub). When it goes down. The whole system is dead.
  • 27. Applications of Star Topology • Star topology used in Local Area Networks(LANs). • High speed LAN often used STAR.
  • 28. Bus Topology • A bus topology is multipoint. • Here one long cable act as a backbone to link all the devices are connected to the backbone by drop lines and taps. • Drop line- is the connection b/w the devices and the cable. • Tap- is the splitter that cut the main link. • This allows only one device to transmit at a time.
  • 30. • When a device sends a message, it is broadcast down on the cable in both directions. Terminators at the end of the cable prevent the signal from reflecting back to the sender. • All devices on the cable constantly monitor for messages meant to them. When a device detects a message meant for it, it reads the message from the cable and the other devices will ignore it. • Since all devices are sharing the same cable, some form of control is needed to make sure which device will transmit when, otherwise there will be a collision.
  • 31. Advantages of Bus Topology 1. Ease of installation. 2. Less cabling. 3. less expensive.
  • 32. Disadvantages of Bus Topology 1. Difficult reconfiguration and fault isolation. 2. Difficult to add new devices. 3. Signal reflection at top can degradation in quality. 4. If any fault in backbone can stops all transmission.
  • 33. Applications of Bus Topology • Most computer motherboard.
  • 34. Ring Topology • Here each device has a dedicated connection with two devices on either side. • The signal is passed in one direction from device to device until it reaches the destination and each device have repeater. • When one device received signals instead of intended another device, its repeater then regenerates the data and passes them along. • To add or delete a device requires changing only two connections.
  • 36. Ring Topology Advantages: 1. Easy to install. 2. Easy to reconfigure. 3. Fault identification is easy. Disadvantages: 1. Unidirectional traffic. 2. Break in a single ring can break entire network.
  • 37. Ring Topology Applications: • Ring topologies are found in some office buildings or school campuses. • Today high speed LANs made this topology less popular.
  • 38. Tree Topology • Alternatively referred to as a star bus topology. • Tree topology is one of the most common network setups that is similar to a bus topology and a star topology. • A tree topology connects multiple star networks to other star networks. Below is a visual example of a simple computer setup on a network using the star topology.
  • 40. Hybrid Topology • A network which contain all type of physical structure and connected under a single backbone channel.
  • 43. Considerations for Choosing Network Topology • Money-Bus n/w may be the least expensive way to install a n/w. • Length-of cable needed- the linear bus n/w uses shorter lengths of cable. • Future growth-with star topology, expending a n/w is easily done by adding another devices. • Cable type-most common used cable in commercial organization is twisted pair. Which is often used with star topologies.
  • 44. • Full mesh topology is theoretically the best since every device is connected to every other device.(thus maximizing speed and security. however, it quite expensive to install) • Next best would be tree topology , which is basically a connection of star.
  • 45. Backbone Networks: Serial Backbone • Daisy chain: linked series of devices – Hubs and switches often connected in daisy chain to extend a network • Hubs, gateways, routers, switches, and bridges can form part of backbone • Extent to which hubs can be connected is limited
  • 47. Repeater or hub A repeater forwards every bit; it has no filtering capability.
  • 48. A router is a three-layer (physical, data link, and network) device.
  • 49. A repeater or a bridge connects segments of a LAN. A router connects independent LANs or WANs to create an internetwork (internet).
  • 51. Hub • Broadcast • More collision • Connect same networking device
  • 52. Switch • Switch is intelligent device • Learning the address • Forwarding • Work on mac address
  • 53. Router • Connect different networks • Routing