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Course ILT Networking computers Unit objectives Use the OSI model to determine the levels of communication used in networking Describe how different types of addressing are used to identify computers on a network Identify technologies for establishing Internet connectivity Create wired and wireless network connections Troubleshoot network connections Course ILT Topic A Topic A: Network communications Topic B: Addressing Topic C: Internet connections Topic D: Network installation Topic E: Network troubleshooting Course ILT The OSI model Course ILT The OSI model applied to LAN Course ILT Activity A-1 Analyzing the OSI model Course ILT Topic B Topic A: Network communications Topic B: Addressing Topic C: Internet connections Topic D: Network installation Topic E: Network troubleshooting Course ILT Addressing MAC address IP address Character-based names Port address Course ILT Identifying addresses Course ILT MAC addresses Function at Data Link layer Host uses OS to discover MAC address of another computer Can’t use MAC address across LANs MAC addresses are absolute All hosts on LAN must use MAC address to communicate MAC addresses with IP addresses used to communicate across LANs Course ILT IP addresses 32-bit long 4-bytes separated by periods Largest possible IP address is 255.255.255.255 Each byte is an octet 4.3 billion possible IP addresses Not all IP addresses available for use IP address has two parts 1. Identifies the network 2. Identifies the host IP classes Course ILT Three public IP classes – Class A – Class B – Class C All assigned IP addresses in these classes are unique Possible number of networks / hosts – Class A – 127 / 16million – Class B – 16,000 / 65,000 – Class C – 2,000,0000 / 254 Course ILT Parts of an IP address Course ILT Character-based names TCP/IP supports Domain Name Service (DNS) – Resolves host names to IP addresses Windows supports NetBIOS names – 16-character name Course ILT Domain Name Service Match host names to IP addresses DNS names have three parts – – – – A computer name A domain name A top-level domain name www.microsoft.com Possible to include subdomains – www.corporate.microsoft.com Course ILT Top-level domains The suffix of a DNS name Original specifications – – – – – – – .com .org .edu .gov .mil .net .int TLDs added for each country Course ILT Recent TLDs .biz .name .museum .pro .aero .coop .info Course ILT NetBIOS names 16-characters First 15-characters for name 16th character specifies service or function Allows special characters !@#$%^&()-_'{}.~ Doesn’t allow spaces or \*+=|:;"?<>, Aren’t case-sensitive 16th character expressed as <hex> Uses flat-namespace Course ILT Resolving NetBIOS names Course ILT WINS Broadcasts can’t go through network devices such as routers WINS allows two computers on separate networks to resolve NetBIOS names A database with registered NetBIOS names Primary name resolution service starting with Windows 2000 is DNS Course ILT Port addresses Transport layer protocols use port addresses Each services listens on a port Port numbers 0 to 1024 are reserved Combination of IP address and port number is a socket Course ILT Activity B-1 Examining addresses Course ILT Topic C Topic A: Network communications Topic B: Addressing Topic C: Internet connections Topic D: Network installation Topic E: Network troubleshooting Course ILT Internet connections Dial-up networking Virtual private network Digital subscriber line Cable Satellite Wireless Local area network Course ILT Connecting to the Internet Bandwidth Greater bandwidth = faster communication potential Digital data transmission measured as data bits per second (bps) One thousand bits per second = Kbps One million bits per second = Mbps Internet connections have varying bandwidths – Dependent on ISP service and physical media Course ILT Connecting LAN to ISP POTS ISDN DSL Cable modem Satellite link Wireless Course ILT Satellite ISP configuration Course ILT Technology speeds POTS — Up to 56 Kbps ISDN — 64 Kbps to 128 Kbps DSL — Up to 1.5 Mbps DSL Lite or G.Lite — Up to 384 Kbps upstream; up to 6 Mbps downstream ADSL — 640 Kbps upstream; up to 6.1 Mbps downstream SDSL — 1.544 Mbps HDSL — 1.5 Mbps continued Course ILT Technology speeds, continued VDSL — Up to 52 Mbps downstream; 16 Mbps upstream Cable modem — 512 Kbps to 5 Mbps 802.11b — 5.5 Mbps or 11 Mbps 802.11g — Up to 54 Mbps 802.11a — Up to 54 Mbps Ethernet — 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps Token ring — 4 Mbps or 16 Mbps T1 — 1.544 Mbps FDDI — 100 Mbps Course ILT Remote access methods To a variety of systems Usually require – Username – Password Can use all LAN/Internet connection methods to make a remote connection Course ILT Activity C-1 Selecting the best Internet connection Course ILT Topic D Topic A: Network communications Topic B: Addressing Topic C: Internet connections Topic D: Network installation Topic E: Network troubleshooting Course ILT Installing a modem 1. Install and configure a modem 2. Install modem device driver – Included with Windows – From modem manufacturer External modem connects to serial port – 9-pin – 25-pin – EIA/TIA-232 standard Internal modem inserted in expansion slot Course ILT Serial ports for external modem Course ILT Activity D-1 Installing a modem Course ILT Dial-up connections Enables a computer to use a modem and a telephone line to connect to a network Modem behaves like a NIC Slower connection speeds Use New Connection Wizard to create dial-up connection in 2000 and XP Course ILT Activity D-2 Creating a dial-up connection TCP/IP in dial-up Course ILT Needs – An IP address – IP address of the default gateway – A subnet mask Know the answers to – Static or dynamic IP addressing? – For static – what is the IP address, subnet mask, default gateway address? – DNS servers assigned? – If not, what are the DNS server addresses? Course ILT Activity D-3 Configuring TCP/IP for a dial-up connection Cable, ISDN, DSL, and Satellite Course ILT All require TCP/IP settings – – – – IP address Subnet mask Gateway address DNS server address Network cable attaches NIC card to – – – – Cable modem DSL box Satellite converter box LAN switch or hub Course ILT Cable and DSL broadband Course ILT Broadband installations 1. Install NIC and drivers 2. Network cable from NIC to – Cable modem – DSL box – Network hub 3. Configure TCP/IP 4. Install and configure Internet apps Course ILT Cable modems Course ILT Cable modem install steps 1. Determine NIC card’s MAC address 2. Configure TCP/IP for broadband 3. Connect the cables Course ILT ISDN and DSL Provided by local telephone company For ISDN need a NT1 and aTA DSL needs a converter box Satellite connection Course ILT Requires – A satellite dish (usually around 2 ft. by 3 ft.) – Two modems (upstream and downstream) – Cables to connect the computer and modems Must locate satellite dish for best signal Run cables from satellite into house Connect cables to modems Connect computer to modems Course ILT Voice over IP Telephone calls over broadband data network Converts voice from analog to digital and back again Can use – A regular telephone with an ATA – An IP phone with an RJ-45 connector, which plugs into your router – Computer-to-computer using software from your VoIP provider, a microphone, speakers, and sound card Course ILT Activity D-4 Configuring TCP/IP Course ILT LAN connections Should be concerned about security All computers connect to Internet through a gateway Three setups – Protocol isolation – Router security – Proxy server security Course ILT Protocol isolation Course ILT Router security Course ILT Proxy server security Course ILT The gateway Gateway access can be any of the Internet connection methods Dial-up would be slow for multiple computers Select connection method for gateway based on amount of traffic Gateway has two connections – One to the LAN – One to the ISP and the Internet Course ILT Configuring LAN Internet connections Does the network use a proxy server? If so, what is the IP address of the server? If no proxy server is used, what is the IP address of the default gateway? Is static IP addressing or dynamic IP addressing used? – If static IP addresses are used, what is the IP address and subnet mask? Course ILT Activity D-5 Describing LAN entry points Course ILT Wireless nodes Infrared transceivers Wireless network adapters Useful for mobile users – Print to a printer IR port – Connect to the network with wireless NIC – Share information between two computers using IR ports Wireless equipment Course ILT Need – Wireless NICs – Wireless router or wireless access point WAP connects WLAN to wired network WAP includes firewall capabilities and connection sharing Place WAP or wireless router in central location WLAN needs a SSID – Change the default for security Course ILT Channel and SSID settings Course ILT Security Enable WEP Alter the wireless access point’s factory settings – Change the default SSID – Disable SSID broadcasts Use MAC filters Enable 802.1x Use Wi-Fi Protected Access mode Disable the use DHCP on WAP Course ILT Wireless authentication methods Unauthenticated access Authorized MAC addresses Wired equivalent protocol WiFi Protected Access The 802.1 protocol Course ILT 802.1x protocol authentication Course ILT Activity D-6 Adding a wireless node to your network Course ILT Topic E Topic A: Network communications Topic B: Addressing Topic C: Internet connections Topic D: Network installation Topic E: Network troubleshooting Course ILT Network troubleshooting Identifying the scope of the problem Observing status indicator lights Checking TCP/IP communication Course ILT Wireless network problems Determine network name Identify security configurations Check notebook wireless NIC power switch Check wireless antenna position Check signal strength Test with another wireless card Remote connection problems Course ILT Problem can be located with – – – – – ISP Communication line in building Network cable to modem or transceiver Network cable to NIC NIC configuration For phone line – test for dial tone with regular phone For cable – check for cable TV signal Swap out cables Use a surge protector or UPS Course ILT Activity E-1 Troubleshooting network problems Course ILT Unit summary Used the OSI model to determine the levels of communication used in networking Described how different types of addressing are used to identify computers on a network Identified technologies for establishing Internet connectivity Created wired and wireless network connections Resolved network connection problems