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Types of Computer Networks By geographic distance • Local Area Networks (LANs) • Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) • Wide Area Networks (WANs) • Personal Area Networks (PANs) • also SANs By media • Wired (copper, fiber), Wireless Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 1 How to set up/ troubleshoot your LAN • In the Windows search box type Network and Sharing Center • Click troubleshoot problems and investigate some of the options. The option Network Adapter will tell you the name of your wires connection. • Click Local Area Connection icon • Click Internet Options at the bottom left Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 2 Information about LAN connections Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 3 LANs • LANs are data networks of computers within a limited geographic area – LANs of wired and wireless technologies are frequently connected. • Protocols are standardized to facilitate interconnection, interface to manufacturers, module reuse • IEEE 802.x standards accepted by ISO Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 4 Ethernet • “Ethernet” has 90+% of wired LAN market • Metcalfe and Boggs developed a wired LAN; first standardized LAN (IEEE 802.3) – Used coaxial cable (somewhat similar to cable TV); called it the “Ether” – Clamp for stations to attach to the cable (tap) – Station Interface Controller (NIC) to handle data translation and interference – With Xerox and Intel, placed in public domain Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 5 Popular standards today • IEEE802.3 (wired LAN, called Ethernet) – Place command mode in search bar, type ipconfig | more • IEEE802.11 (wireless LAN, called WiFi) – FDU has a wireless network (using access pts) • IEEE802.15 (WPANs, specifically Bluetooth) Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 6 Network devices • Nodes – devices on the network – Computers (Hosts or stations) – Network connecting devices • Routers, switches, hubs, gateways – Network peripherals (printers, scanners, storage devices) – Repeaters (boost signal) – Modem (used to connect to the Internet) Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 7 Network Interface Card • NIC (or adapter) – Can be added onto the system board, attached to USB port, although typically NICs are bought with current systems • Laptops will have a wired and a wireless NIC • NICs contain a MAC (physical) address • NICs contain the network software (protocol) in firmware Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 8 Client/server mode • Servers are frequently dedicated to specific applications – File server – Print server – Web server • (Multiple) client machines request services from servers • Clients connect to web servers Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 9 Peer-to-peer mode • Workstations, laptops, etc. (perhaps using Bluetooth) cooperate in running the network and the devices – File sharing systems such as Kazaa, BitTorrent • Wi-Fi supports both peer-to-peer (ad hoc) and client-server (infrastructure) modes. Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 10 Physical topology • Bus topology (MANs such as optimum online; original Ethernet implementation) • Star topology – local loop; switched Ethernet; cellular phones; Wi-Fi with access points • Tree topology (hierarchical) • Graph (WANs) Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 11 Interconnecting networks • Bridges connect similar LANs • Gateways connect any types of networks – Typically used to connect home or school LAN to the Internet – Translate between different types of addresses, protocols, etc. • They all have to accommodate potential differences in speed Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 12 Networks Links • Data travels either on cable or thru the air – Each data stream must be assigned a unique channel so that streams do not get garbled • The range of frequencies of the link (bandwidth) determines the maximum amount of transmission capacity – Bandwidth is measured in hertz (Hz); transmission capacity in bps Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 13 Broadband or narrowband • Narrowband channels – Up to 56kbps for dial-up access • Broadband channels – Gigabit Ethernet (802.3ba 100Gbps) – 802.11n has maximum thruput of 100Mbps – Internet surfing would be slow on narrowband channels Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 14 Transmission Noise • Data can be corrupted by noise, such as – Energy bursts – White noise – Different signals sent on the same frequency band (WiFi and Bluetooth devices use the same channels) – Hidden station problem • Network protocols recover from noise Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 15 Packet Switching • Messages (phone calls, downloads, mail) are divided into smaller units called packets – Bits are added to allow them to be reassembled – Source and Destination addresses are added to each packet to allow individual routing – Packets can be multiplexed (combined) onto a higher speed line • Network protocols reassemble packets into messages, retransmit lost packets, etc. . Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 16 Types of Network Addresses • MAC (physical) address is assigned to NIC • In Ethernet, in hardware by the manufacturer • A Domain address is assigned by The International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to FDU, etc. • An IP desktop address may be assigned by DHCP or by your ISP (IPv4 and IPv6) • Network Apps are assigned ports by the OS Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 17 Internet Infrastructure • Internet Infrastructure is maintained by NSPs (1st tier ISPs) – High speed routers deliver packets to destination – Links may be wired or wireless • Most infrastructure links are fiber • FCC obtained some free bandwidth by the replacement of analog television by digital television – For use as high speed wireless transmission channel Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 18 Advantages of Wired Connections • Wired networks use cables, either fiber or copper (land phone lines, cable TV, FIOS) • Faster • More secure • Less noise • Typically easy to configure – Almost plug and play Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 19 Disadvantages of wired connections • Inconvenient – People don’t like cables (rat’s nest) – Limited mobility – Harder to install LAN cables – perhaps through walls, ceilings – Harder to fix breaks in links • Animals have bitten through fiber cables • Copper wires have been dug up and sold Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 20 Advantages of Ethernet • Public domain software • Many vendors manufacture equipment – NICs are cheap- typically included with a desktop or lap top • Mature and reliable • Very fast • Wi-Fi became popular because it is compatible with Ethernet Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 21 Ethernet equipment • • • • Get two or more Ethernet-ready computers An Ethernet router Surge strip Cables for each computer – Twisted pair cat 5 or cat 6 • Internet access device such as modem – (router may provide all of these functions) Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 22 Devices to connect computers • Hub, switch or router? – Hub – incoming data is resent to all stations • Cheap - you can get some for $5 to $15 – Switch • Sends data to destination computer only • More secure if you have multiple users on network – Router/ gateway • Connects to the Internet and switches data • Adapts to the speed of the sending devices Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 23 Cabling • Network cables are terminated with RJ45 connectors (they look similar to telephone cables, but connectors are a bit larger) – Category 5 or 6 UTP recommended • Maximum length of about 100 meters (328 feet) • Just plug in the cables at each end Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 24 Set up • Turn off all devices • Attach cables into ports in each pair of devices – Secure cables • Power up the devices (using surge strips) • OS should automatically detect and set up the network • Use network utilities, task bar to verify connection Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 25 Wireless networks • Radio, microwave or infrared signals – Infrared – 1012 – 1014 Hz band • These do not go through objects • Used for channel changers – Microwave -108 – 1012 Hz band • Do not go through objects • Susceptible to interference by birds, rain • Used by satellites, long distance signals – Radio signals – 104 – 108 Hz band • go through most objects (not metal, stacked paper) Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 26 FCC • In the U.S., frequency bands are assigned by FCC – Licensed bands are paid for by radio stations, television stations – Some bands are unlicensed and available to the public, but portions of these are agreed upon for specific usage • Garage door openers, pagers, wireless LANs Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 27 Advantages of wireless networks • Mobility • No electromagnetic interference, specifically no power spikes (surges) • No cables, jacks – No breakage of cables, jacks • Ease of installation Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 28 Disadvantages • Slower transmission rates • Signals must be boosted more often than wired LANs • Interference from other broadcasts and devices, some objects block transmission • Security – Broadcasts can be easily captured – Encrypt your data; lock your system Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 29 Bluetooth • Bluetooth nodes set up peer-to-peer piconets with other devices • Limited distance; speed 2.4 GHz band up to 3Mbps; up to about 300 ft 6-9 GHz band up to 480 Mbps Appropriate for connecting devices together such as a mouse to a computer Also connects cell phones to a wireless headset Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 30 Wi-Fi speed • The term Wi-Fi refers to a set of IEEE 802.11 standards: 802.11b, a, g, n, y • Frequencies used by b, g, and n are in the 2.4GHz unlicensed band, same as basic Bluetooth and some cellular phones – Bluetooth is slower, and typically its signals knock out 802.11 (not vice versa) • g and n are backward compatible with b Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 31 Speeds of Wi-Fi • Speeds of about 11 Mbps (b), 54 Mbps (g), 144Mbps (100Mbps throughput) for n Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 32 Wi-Fi • Wi-Fi LANs require an access point (base station) in infrastructure mode – Functionality can be built into wireless router – Stations transmit to access point which then forwards packets to destination station of LAN, or out through a wired connection to the Internet – All wireless devices must have at least one antenna to receive and send packets Chapter 5 Local Area Networks 33