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1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Ways to connect a LAN Using IP and MAC addresses Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Ways to connect a LAN Using IP and MAC addresses Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 2 2 Types of Network Types of LAN WAN LAN Client/Server Peer to Peer Bus 4 Ways to connect LAN Ring Mesh Star Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Ways to connect a LAN Using IP and MAC addresses Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN There are two basic ways to organise a local area network… Client/server ‘centralised’ Cambridge Technicals IT Peer to Peer ‘decentralised’ 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Client/server Client Server ‘centralised’ Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Client/server Advantages • Security – Can be managed by server e.g. control access to files • Back-ups – Can be done for data on all clients by server • Upgrades - As demand grows, can improve server Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Cost – Must buy server and pay extra for high performance hardware • Cabling – Extra needed to connect each client • Staff – Need technicians to set-up & run server • Dependence – If server crashes, then whole network fails 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Peer to Peer ‘Workstations’ Peer = equals ‘decentralised’ Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Peer to Peer Advantages • Decentralised – Keeps running even if one workstation crashes • Low cost – No need to buy a central server and employ IT staff • Sharing - Workstations can store & share files Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Security – No central logon control & users can delete ‘shared’ files • Recovery – No central backups so data can be lost • Upgrades – Each machine must be upgraded separately 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Types of LAN Comparison Peer to Peer • Good for smaller networks, such as for a business with around 10 employees • Good for sharing files, where security is not a major concern Client/Server • Good for larger networks, where cost of server is worth the extra performance • Good for central control, such as managing logons or access to files Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Ways to connect a LAN Using IP and MAC addresses Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Ways to Connect a LAN • Means how devices are actually connected on a network • Four options! • Key factors for choice include cost and scale • Know basic types plus Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics ‘Classic’ LAN Topologies Bus Ring Mesh Star Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Bus Terminator Cambridge Technicals IT ‘Backbone’ 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Bus Terminator ‘Backbone’ Data Collision Cambridge Technicals IT Data sent simultaneously from different computers but cable can’t carry but signals at once 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Bus Advantages • Installation - simpler and cheaper since needs less cabling • Reliable – if one workstation fails, rest of network still works • Expansion – easy to add extra workstations Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Backbone – If main cable fails, network fails • Performance - As more workstations connected, more data collisions slows performance • Security – Very weak as all workstations receive all data 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Ring Take turns Devices take turns to transmit data One Direction All data travels same way to reduce collisions Closed ‘loop’ of cabling Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Ring Advantages • Transfer speed – Good because no ‘collisions’ since data only flows in one direction Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Ring route – data must travel through all workstations to reach destination machine • Broken links – If one workstation fails, then network affected 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Mesh Individual links Each device connected to all others Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Mesh Individual links Each device connected to all others Cambridge Technicals IT Wireless mesh Give all benefits and saves cabling 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Mesh Advantages • Wireless – works well with no cable • Reliable – if one workstation fails, rest of network still works • Direct links – No need for routing since all workstations linked Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Cable – Set-up is costly if actually ‘wired’ • Maintenance – Hard because so many links • Expansion - tricky since ‘old’ workstations also need new connections adding 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Star Central links Central control ? Switch Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Star File Server Local Area Network (LAN) Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics LAN Topologies Star Advantages • Reliable – if a cable or device fails, rest of network is fine • Expansion – Adding extra machines won’t disrupt others • Control – Can monitor network using central hardware Cambridge Technicals IT Disadvantages • Cost – Need to buy central hardware, such as switch • Dependence - if central hardware fails, then network fails! 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Types of LAN Ways to connect a LAN Using IP and MAC addresses Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Internet Public Cambridge Technicals IT LAN Private 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Internet Public Cambridge Technicals IT LAN Private 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Internet Public Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Internet Public 0100 1000 DNS Server 185.67.45.176 Data Centre We humans use web addresses or URLs A But that gets translated into an IP address It’sCambridge done Technicals behindIT the scenes by DNS servers B 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Inside a Packet Footer ‘Payload’ Header Destination IP address Actual data Sender IP address e.g. few hundred bytes Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Summary Internet Public • The ‘public’ internet uses IP addresses • We use URLs that are converted into IP addresses by DNS • Packets then labelled with IP address for sender & destination Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Internet Public Cambridge Technicals IT LAN Private 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing LAN Private • ‘Private’ LANs also need a unique ID or address for each device • This is called a MAC address… Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing LAN Private File Server Local Area Network (LAN) Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing LAN Private MAC address and NIC The MAC address is ‘burned in’ permanently to every device Devices usually have a Network Interface Card (NIC) So switches use MAC addresses to send packets to right device Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Mac Address All your wireless gadgets also have a MAC address as a unique ‘ID’ That’s done via chipset, not a NIC Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Addressing Summary ‘Public’ Internet • Uses IP addresses as unique IDs as labels for packets to show destination • We use URLs as web address but they’re translated to IP addresses by DNS servers ‘Private’ LANs • Use MAC addresses that are burned into all devices & work on wired/wireless links • Switches & routers can use MAC address to send data packets to the correct device Cambridge Technicals IT 1 Fundamentals of IT 3.3 Networking Characteristics Cambridge Technicals IT