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Computer Networks: A Systems Approach, 5e Larry L. Peterson and Bruce S. Davie Chapter 1 Foundation Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved 1 Chapter 1 Problems How to build a scalable network that will support different applications? What is a computer network? How is a computer network different from other types of networks? What is a computer network architecture? 2 Chapter 1 Chapter Outline Applications Requirements Network Architecture Implementing Network Software Performance 3 Chapter 1 Chapter Goal Exploring the requirements that different applications and different communities place on the computer network Introducing the idea of network architecture Introducing some key elements in implementing Network Software Define key metrics that will be used to evaluate the performance of computer network 4 Chapter 1 Applications Most people know about the Internet (a computer network) through applications World Wide Web Email Online Social Network Streaming Audio Video File Sharing Instant Messaging … 5 Chapter 1 Example of an application A multimedia application including video-conferencing 6 URL Hyper Text Transfer Protocol TCP Uniform resource locater http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~llp/index.html HTTP Chapter 1 Application Protocol Transmission Control Protocol 17 messages for one URL request 6 to find the IP (Internet Protocol) address 3 for connection establishment of TCP 4 for HTTP request and acknowledgement Request: I got your request and I will send the data Reply: Here is the data you requested; I got the data 4 messages for tearing down TCP connection 7 Application Programmer List the services that his application needs: delay bounded delivery of data Network Designer Chapter 1 Requirements Design a cost-effective network with sharable resources Network Provider List the characteristics of a system that is easy to manage 8 Need to understand the following terminologies Scale Link Nodes Point-to-point Multiple access Switched Network (a) (b) Chapter 1 Connectivity Circuit Switched Packet Switched Packet, message Store-and-forward Point-to-point Multiple access 9 Terminologies (contd.) (a) Chapter 1 Connectivity Cloud Hosts Switches internetwork Router/gateway Host-to-host connectivity Address Routing Unicast/broadcast/multicast (b) (a) (b) A switched network Interconnection of networks 10 Chapter 1 Section Summary The main idea to take away from this discussion is that we can define a network recursively as consisting of two or more nodes connected by a physical link, or as two or more networks connected by a node. In other words, a network can be constructed from a nesting of networks, where at the bottom level, the network is implemented by some physical medium. Among the key challenges in providing network connectivity are the definition of an address for each node that is reachable on the network (including support for broadcast and multicast), and the use of such addresses to forward messages toward the appropriate destination node(s). 11 Resource: links and nodes How to share a link? Multiplexing De-multiplexing Synchronous Time-division Multiplexing Multiplexing multiple logical flows over a single physical link Chapter 1 Cost-Effective Resource Sharing Time slots/data transmitted in predetermined slots 12 FDM: Frequency Division Multiplexing Statistical Multiplexing A switch multiplexing packets from multiple sources onto one shared link Chapter 1 Cost-Effective Resource Sharing Data is transmitted based on demand of each flow. What is a flow? Packets vs. Messages FIFO, Round-Robin, Priorities (Quality-ofService (QoS)) Congested? LAN, MAN, WAN SAN (System Area Networks 13 Chapter 1 Statistical multiplexing The bottom line is that statistical multiplexing defines a cost-effective way for multiple users (e.g., host-to-host flows of data) to share network resources (links and nodes) in a fine-grained manner. It defines the packet as the granularity with which the links of the network are allocated to different flows, with each switch able to schedule the use of the physical links it is connected to on a per-packet basis. Fairly allocating link capacity to different flows and dealing with congestion when it occurs are the key challenges of statistical multiplexing. 14 Chapter 1 LAN, MAN, WAN One way to characterize networks is according to their size. Two well-known examples are local area networks (LANs) and wide area networks (WANs); the former typically extend less than 1 km, while the latter can be worldwide. Other networks are classified as metropolitan area networks (MANs), which usually span tens of kilometers. The reason such classifications are interesting is that the size of a network often has implications for the underlying technology that can be used, with a key factor being the amount of time it takes for data to propagate from one end of the network to the other; we discuss this issue more in later chapters. 15 Chapter 1 LAN x WAN An interesting historical note is that the term wide area network was not applied to the first WANs because there was no other sort of network to differentiate them from. When computers were incredibly rare and expensive, there was no point in thinking about how to connect all the computers in the local area—there was only one computer in that area. Only as computers began to proliferate did LANs become necessary, and the term “WAN” was then introduced to describe the larger networks that interconnected geographically distant computers. 16 Chapter 1 SAN Another kind of network that we need to be aware of is SANs (usually now expanded as storage area networks, but formerly also known as system area networks). SANs are usually confined to a single room and connect the various components of a large computing system. For example, Fibre Channel is a common SAN technology used to connect high-performance computing systems to storage servers and data vaults. Although this book does not describe such networks in detail, they are worth knowing about because they are often at the leading edge in terms of performance, and because it is increasingly common to connect such networks into LANs and WANs. 17 Chapter 1 Support for Common Services Logical Channels Application-to-Application communication path or a pipe Process communicating over an abstract channel 18 Chapter 1 Common Communication Patterns Client/Server Two types of communication channel Request/Reply Channels Message Stream Channels 19 Network should hide the errors Bits are lost Chapter 1 Reliability Bit errors (1 to a 0, and vice versa) Burst errors – several consecutive errors Packets are lost (Congestion) Links and Node failures Messages are delayed Messages are delivered out-of-order Third parties eavesdrop 20 Chapter 1 Summary on channels The key idea to take away from this discussion is that defining useful channels involves both understanding the applications’ requirements and recognizing the limitations of the underlying technology. The challenge is to fill in the gap between what the application expects and what the underlying technology can provide. This is sometimes called the semantic gap. 21 Chapter 1 Network Architecture Example of a layered network system 22 Chapter 1 Network Architecture Layered system with alternative abstractions available at a given layer 23 Chapter 1 Protocols Protocol defines the interfaces between the layers in the same system and with the layers of peer system Building blocks of a network architecture Each protocol object has two different interfaces service interface: operations on this protocol peer-to-peer interface: messages exchanged with peer Term “protocol” is overloaded specification of peer-to-peer interface module that implements this interface 24 Chapter 1 Interfaces Service and Peer Interfaces 25 Chapter 1 Protocols Protocol Specification: prose, pseudo-code, state transition diagram Interoperable: when two or more protocols that implement the specification accurately IETF: Internet Engineering Task Force 26 Chapter 1 Protocol Graph Example of a protocol graph nodes are the protocols and links the “depends-on” relation 27 Chapter 1 Encapsulation High-level messages are encapsulated inside of low-level messages 28 Chapter 1 OSI Architecture The OSI 7-layer Model OSI – Open Systems Interconnection 29 Physical Layer Handles the transmission of raw bits over a communication link Data Link Layer Chapter 1 Description of Layers Collects a stream of bits into a larger aggregate called a frame Network adaptor along with device driver in OS implement the protocol in this layer Frames are actually delivered to hosts Network Layer Handles routing among nodes within a packet-switched network Unit of data exchanged between nodes in this layer is called a packet The lower three layers are implemented on all network nodes 30 Chapter 1 Description of Layers Transport Layer Session Layer Provides a name space that is used to tie together the potentially different transport streams that are part of a single application Presentation Layer Implements a process-to-process channel Unit of data exchanges in this layer is called a message Concerned about the format of data exchanged between peers Application Layer Standardize common type of exchanges The transport layer and the higher layers typically run only on endhosts and not on the intermediate switches and routers 31 Internet Protocol Graph Chapter 1 Internet Architecture Alternative view of the Internet architecture. The “Network” layer shown here is sometimes referred to as the “sub-network” or “link” layer. 32 Chapter 1 Internet Architecture Defined by IETF Three main features Does not imply strict layering. The application is free to bypass the defined transport layers and to directly use IP or other underlying networks An hour-glass shape – wide at the top, narrow in the middle and wide at the bottom. IP serves as the focal point for the architecture In order for a new protocol to be officially included in the architecture, there needs to be both a protocol specification and at least one (and preferably two) representative implementations of the specification 33 Chapter 1 Summary Internet architecture Of these three attributes of the Internet architecture, the hourglass design philosophy is important enough to bear repeating. The hourglass’s narrow waist represents a minimal and carefully chosen set of global capabilities that allows both higher-level applications and lower-level communication technologies to coexist, share capabilities, and evolve rapidly. The narrow-waisted model is critical to the Internet’s ability to adapt rapidly to new user demands and changing technologies. 34 Chapter 1 Application Programming Interface Interface exported by the network Since most network protocols are implemented (those in the high protocol stack) in software and nearly all computer systems implement their network protocols as part of the operating system, when we refer to the interface “exported by the network”, we are generally referring to the interface that the OS provides to its networking subsystem The interface is called the network Application Programming Interface (API) 35 Socket Interface was originally provided by the Berkeley distribution of Unix - Now supported in virtually all operating systems Each protocol provides a certain set of services, and the API provides a syntax by which those services can be invoked in this particular OS Chapter 1 Application Programming Interface (Sockets) 36 What is a socket? Chapter 1 Socket The point where a local application process attaches to the network An interface between an application and the network An application creates the socket The interface defines operations for Creating a socket Attaching a socket to the network Sending and receiving messages through the socket Closing the socket 37 Socket Family Chapter 1 Socket PF_INET denotes the Internet family PF_UNIX denotes the Unix pipe facility PF_PACKET denotes direct access to the network interface (i.e., it bypasses the TCP/IP protocol stack) Socket Type SOCK_STREAM is used to denote a byte stream SOCK_DGRAM is an alternative that denotes a message oriented service, such as that provided by UDP 38 Chapter 1 Creating a Socket int sockfd = socket(address_family, type, protocol); The socket number returned is the socket descriptor for the newly created socket int sockfd = socket (PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); int sockfd = socket (PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); The combination of PF_INET and SOCK_STREAM implies TCP 39 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP Server Passive open Prepares to accept connection, does not actually establish a connection Server invokes int bind (int socket, struct sockaddr *address, int addr_len) int listen (int socket, int backlog) int accept (int socket, struct sockaddr *address, int *addr_len) 40 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP Bind Binds the newly created socket to the specified address i.e. the network address of the local participant (the server) Address is a data structure which combines IP and port Listen Defines how many connections can be pending on the specified socket 41 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP Accept Carries out the passive open Blocking operation Does not return until a remote participant has established a connection When it does, it returns a new socket that corresponds to the new established connection and the address argument contains the remote participant’s address 42 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP Client Application performs active open It says who it wants to communicate with Client invokes int connect (int socket, struct sockaddr *address, int addr_len) Connect Does not return until TCP has successfully established a connection at which application is free to begin sending data Address contains remote machine’s address 43 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP In practice The client usually specifies only remote participant’s address and let’s the system fill in the local information Whereas a server usually listens for messages on a well-known port A client does not care which port it uses for itself, the OS simply selects an unused one 44 Chapter 1 Client-Serve Model with TCP Once a connection is established, the application process invokes two operation int send (int socket, char *msg, int msg_len, int flags) int recv (int socket, char *buff, int buff_len, int flags) 45 #include <stdio.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <netdb.h> Chapter 1 Example Application: Client #define SERVER_PORT 5432 #define MAX_LINE 256 int main(int argc, char * argv[]) { FILE *fp; struct hostent *hp; struct sockaddr_in sin; char *host; char buf[MAX_LINE]; int s; int len; if (argc==2) { host = argv[1]; } else { fprintf(stderr, "usage: simplex-talk host\n"); exit(1); } 46 /* translate host name into peer’s IP address */ hp = gethostbyname(host); if (!hp) { fprintf(stderr, "simplex-talk: unknown host: %s\n", host); exit(1); } /* build address data structure */ bzero((char *)&sin, sizeof(sin)); sin.sin_family = AF_INET; bcopy(hp->h_addr, (char *)&sin.sin_addr, hp->h_length); sin.sin_port = htons(SERVER_PORT); /* active open */ if ((s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) < 0) { perror("simplex-talk: socket"); exit(1); } if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&sin, sizeof(sin)) < 0) { perror("simplex-talk: connect"); close(s); exit(1); } /* main loop: get and send lines of text */ while (fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), stdin)) { buf[MAX_LINE-1] = ’\0’; len = strlen(buf) + 1; send(s, buf, len, 0); } Chapter 1 Example Application: Client } 47 #include <stdio.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <netdb.h> #define SERVER_PORT 5432 #define MAX_PENDING 5 #define MAX_LINE 256 Chapter 1 Example Application: Server int main() { struct sockaddr_in sin; char buf[MAX_LINE]; int len; int s, new_s; /* build address data structure */ bzero((char *)&sin, sizeof(sin)); sin.sin_family = AF_INET; sin.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY; sin.sin_port = htons(SERVER_PORT); /* setup passive open */ if ((s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) < 0) { perror("simplex-talk: socket"); exit(1); } 48 if ((bind(s, (struct sockaddr *)&sin, sizeof(sin))) < 0) { perror("simplex-talk: bind"); exit(1); } listen(s, MAX_PENDING); /* wait for connection, then receive and print text */ while(1) { if ((new_s = accept(s, (struct sockaddr *)&sin, &len)) < 0) { perror("simplex-talk: accept"); exit(1); } while (len = recv(new_s, buf, sizeof(buf), 0)) fputs(buf, stdout); close(new_s); } Chapter 1 Example Application: Server } 49 Chapter 1 Performance Bandwidth Width of the frequency band Number of bits per second that can be transmitted over a communication link 1 Mbps: 1 x 106 bits/second = 1x220 bits/sec 1 x 10-6 seconds to transmit each bit or imagine that a timeline, now each bit occupies 1 micro second space. On a 2 Mbps link the width is 0.5 micro second. Smaller the width more will be transmission per unit time. 50 Chapter 1 Bandwidth Bits transmitted at a particular bandwidth can be regarded as having some width: (a) bits transmitted at 1Mbps (each bit 1 μs wide); (b) bits transmitted at 2Mbps (each bit 0.5 μs wide). 51 Chapter 1 Bandwidth x Throughput Bandwidth and throughput are two of the most confusing terms used in networking. While we could try to give you a precise definition of each term, it is important that you know how other people might use them and for you to be aware that they are often used interchangeably. First of all, bandwidth is literally a measure of the width of a frequency band. For example, a voice-grade telephone line supports a frequency band ranging from 300 to 3300 Hz; it is said to have a bandwidth of 3300 Hz−300 Hz = 3000 Hz. 52 Chapter 1 Bandwidth x Throughput If you see the word bandwidth used in a situation in which it is being measured in hertz, then it probably refers to the range of signals that can be accommodated. When we talk about the bandwidth of a communication link, we normally refer to the number of bits per second that can be transmitted on the link. This is also sometimes called the data rate. We might say that the bandwidth of an Ethernet link is 10 Mbps. A useful distinction can also be made, however, between the maximum data rate that is available on the link and the number of bits per second that we can actually transmit over the link in practice. We tend to use the word throughput to refer to the measured performance of a system. 53 Chapter 1 Bandwidth x Throughput Thus, because of various inefficiencies of implementation, a pair of nodes connected by a link with a bandwidth of 10 Mbps might achieve a throughput of only 2 Mbps. This would mean that an application on one host could send data to the other host at 2 Mbps. Finally, we often talk about the bandwidth requirements of an application. This is the number of bits per second that it needs to transmit over the network to perform acceptably. For some applications, this might be “whatever I can get”; for others, it might be some fixed number (preferably no more than the available link bandwidth); and for others, it might be a number that varies with time. We will provide more on this topic later in this section. 54 Chapter 1 Performance Latency = Propagation + transmit + queue Propagation = distance/speed of light Transmit = size/bandwidth One bit transmission => propagation is important Large bytes transmission => bandwidth is important 55 Chapter 1 Delay X Bandwidth We think the channel between a pair of processes as a hollow pipe Latency (delay) length of the pipe and bandwidth the width of the pipe Delay of 50 ms and bandwidth of 45 Mbps 50 x 10-3 seconds x 45 x 106 bits/second 2.25 x 106 bits = 280 KB data. Network as a pipe 56 Chapter 1 Delay X Bandwidth Relative importance of bandwidth and latency depends on application For large file transfer, bandwidth is critical For small messages (HTTP, NFS, etc.), latency is critical Variance in latency (jitter) can also affect some applications (e.g., audio/video conferencing) 57 Chapter 1 Delay X Bandwidth How many bits the sender must transmit before the first bit arrives at the receiver if the sender keeps the pipe full Takes another one-way latency to receive a response from the receiver If the sender does not fill the pipe—send a whole delay × bandwidth product’s worth of data before it stops to wait for a signal—the sender will not fully utilize the network 58 Chapter 1 Delay-Bandwidth product 59 Infinite bandwidth Chapter 1 Delay X Bandwidth RTT dominates Throughput = TransferSize / TransferTime TransferTime = RTT + 1/Bandwidth x TransferSize Its all relative 1-MB file to 1-Gbps link looks like a 1-KB packet to 1-Mbps link 60 Chapter 1 Relationship between bandwidth and latency 10 MB 10 MB A 10MB file would fill the 1-Mbps link 80 times, but only fill the 1-Gbps link 1/12 of one time 61 Chapter 1 Another view on high-speed nets Another way to think about the situation is that more data can be transmitted during each RTT on a high-speed network, so much so that a single RTT becomes a significant amount of time. Thus, while you wouldn’t think twice about the difference between a file transfer taking 101 RTTs rather than 100 RTTs (a relative difference of only 1%), suddenly the difference between 1 RTT and 2 RTTs is significant—a 100% increase. In other words, latency, rather than throughput, starts to dominate our thinking about network design. 62 Chapter 1 Summary We have identified what we expect from a computer network We have defined a layered architecture for computer network that will serve as a blueprint for our design We have discussed the socket interface which will be used by applications for invoking the services of the network subsystem We have discussed two performance metrics using which we can analyze the performance of computer networks 63