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Chapter 10 IP • • • • • Packet-switching Connectionless Unreliable Best-effort delivery Depends on TCP to provide error checking and reliability Benefits of Subnetting • Creates smaller broadcast domains • Provides low-level security • Increases address flexibility Layer 3 Device • Router • provides end-to-end packet delivery services to its user, the transport layer • Makes best path determination based on IP addressing • Strips off Layer 2 source addresses and replace them with its OWN Layer 2 source address when forwarding a packet. Routers • Do not forward broadcast or multicast frames • Forward packets based on the Layer 3 header information. • Can limit or secure network traffic based on identifiable attributes within each packet. • Switch packets to the appropriate interface based on the destination IP address. • Can perform bridging and routing. Layer 3 Packet/Datagram VERS HLEN Service Type Total Length IdentificationPrevents routing Flags Fragment Offset Time to Live Protocol loops Header Checksum Source IP Address Destination IP Address IP Options (if any) Data Padding Layer 3 Devices • Routers • • • • Interconnect network segments or entire networks. Make logical decisions based on IP addresses. Determines best path for data on an internetwork. Create broadcast domains Path Determination • The process the router uses to choose the next hop in the path the packet travels. • The router uses the network address to identify the destination network of a packet within an internetwork. • IP addresses can be assigned by a network administrator or automatically (dynamically.) Broadcast Addresses • Broadcast Address – is used to send data to all of the devices on a network. • Broadcast IP addresses end with binary 1s in the host part of the address. • Class B Broadcast Address example: • 176.10.255.255 (Remember decimal 255 = binary 11111111) BINARY ANDING • This is the process that routers use to determine the network or subnetwork portion of an IP address using the address and the subnet mask • Both digits must be ones in order for the result to be a one. Layer 3 Protocols • IP • Internet Protocol • ARP • Address Resolution Protocol • ICMP • Internet Control Message Protocol DHCP Process • Requires DHCP server on network • Initializes on computer start-up • • • • Sends DHCP discover Server responds with a DHCP offer Host responds with a DHCP request Server responds with DHCP ack Default Gateway • A default gateway is the IP address of the interface on the router that connects to the network segment that it needs. • The default gateway’s IP address must be in the same network segment as the host is on. Routed Protocols • Provide packet switching and packet forwarding between hosts (end system to end system) • Bases decisions on logical addresses • Examples • • • • • IP IPX Appletalk XNS DECnet NetBEUI • Non-routable layer 3 protocol • Small, fast, efficient • Only works on the same network segment Router Interfaces • Routers connect separate networks • Each of the connections to those network is called interface or port • Each interface must have its own IP address Routing Protocol • Maintains a routing table • • • Routing tables include • • • • • Table of routes to network destinations and metrics to those destinations Shares routing tables between Protocol(s) used Metrics Networks Outbound interfaces Examples: • • • • • RIP (Routing Information Protocol) – distance vector IGRP (Interior Gateway Routing Protocol) – distance vector OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) – link state EIGRP (Enhanced IGRP) - hybrid IS-IS (Intermediate System to Intermediate System) – link state Metric • A measurement • Used by routing protocols to determine the best path to a destination • Examples: • RIP – hop count • IGRP – bandwidth, load, reliability, delay Routed vs. Routing Protocols • Routed protocols are routed by routing protocols. RIP • • • • Distance vector routing protocol Metric: hop count Max: 15 hops Routing table updates every 30 seconds