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How the Internet Works? ( TCP/IP, DNS, HKIX … ) How computers send data? Protocol Connection method Channel Address 2 Outline • Internet Hardware – Modem, Wired, Hubs, Switches • Basic Internet Structure – Postal service analogy • Internet Software – IP address, Subnets – Network Protocol – DNS, WINS and Domains • HKIX and HARNET 3 Communication Channel what kind of media? • Telephone line (Twist pair, Optical fiber) – Modulator-Demodulator (Modem) – Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) • Cable modem • Satellite, Microwave • Wireless connection (IR, RF) 4 Different medium • • • • • • Twisted pair RJ45 connector Coaxial cable BNC connector Fiber optic cable Different cabling length – Optic > coaxial > Twisted pair 5 Use Modem Digital data - 10101010101 Telephone line Analog data • Modulation / De-modulation • E.g. CU Dialup Pool (56kbps max.) 6 Use Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) Traditional phone line ADSL modem Why ADSL? 7 Why ADSL? • Asymmetric DSL – A slower upstream (upload) can trade off a faster downstream (download) speed. – 128 to 640 kbps (upstream) – 1.5M to 5M bps (downstream) • E.g. PCCW - Netvigator 8 Use Cable Modems • Use coaxial cable to carry TV signal and High speed Internet access 9 Satellite & Microwave • Satellite systems – Use satellites orbiting above the Earth to relay signals from one part of a WAN to another, cause 0.5 to 5 sec delays. • Microwave – Costly to install but cheaper than satellite. – It is very useful for connecting networks that are separated by a barrier, such as a highway or a lake. 10 Use Cellular Phone • Mobile computing • Latest technology – Bluetooth – A wireless technology 11 Using A Computer To Interconnect Networks • Special-purpose computers are used to interconnect networks. – Using standard hardware (CPU, memory, and network interfaces) – Running special-purpose software 12 Network Interface Card NIC • Physically connects a computer to the transmission medium on a network. • What is device driver? – NIC comes with different drivers for different types of operating systems. – A driver is the software that allows the operating system to communicate with the network interface card. • What is the major difference between an expensive, 3Com, and a cheap, Filand, NIC? 13 Routers • Interconnecting computers are called routers by using the same protocol. – Determining where to send packets Router 14 Hubs • A network cable connects a computer via a network card to a hub. • Provides a central location. 15 Ports • A hub contains sockets or ports. • Some LED indicates information transferred through the port. 16 Ethernet Repeater • A repeater is a device that strengthens and retransmits signals on a network. 17 Network Architecture • It refers how information transfers on networks. • Ethernet – It the most popular architecture used to build networks. – Least expensive and easiest to setup • Token-ring architecture – It was developed by IBM in 1984. – They are popular found in large organizations, such as banks and insurance companies. • Others: ARCnet, AppleTalk, … 18 Ethernet & Token Ring • Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet (transmit data at 1Gbps). 19 Packet switching example Figure 16.1 An example internet with four networks connected by routers. Figure 16.2 Cars from two roads merging onto another road are analogous to packets from two networks merging onto a third network. 20 IP address • Each host in the Internet is assigned to a specific and unique number for identification. • This number is called the IP address of the specific host. • This number is divided into 4 parts for improving the readability. • The range of each number is between 0 and 255. – E.g. 0.0.0.0 – 255.255.255.255 • For example, the host “orchid.cse.cuhk.edu.hk” has its IP address of “137.189.91.60” 21 Network Number / Host Number • IP addresses are split into 2 parts – A network number + a host number • For example, 137.189 is the network number of CUHK, 91.60 is the host number of the host “orchid.cse.cuhk.edu.hk” • Network numbers are assigned by a central authority, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). 22 Network Classes • There are 5 classes of IP address • Class A comprises networks 1.0.0.0 to 127.255.255.255, the network address is in first quad. It allows roughly 16 million hosts per network. • Class B comprises network 128.0.0.0 to 191.255.255.255, the network address is in the first two quads. It allows for 16,382 networks with up to 64K hosts. 23 Network Classes • Class C comprises networks 192.0.0.0 to 223.255.255.255, with the network number contained in the first three quads. It allows about 2 million networks with up to 254 hosts in each network. • Class D and E are falling into the range of 224.0.0.0 to 254.0.0.0 which are reserved for multicast address and for special purpose use. 24 Subnet • The Internet is structured hierarchically. CUHK consists of many academic departments and administrative bodies. • IP allows you to subdivide a network into several subnets. E.g. CSE and CSC are two subnets inside CUHK. • Each subnet is identified by a subnet number. • E.g. we have a different way to interpret the IP address 137.189.91.60 – 137.189 refers to the network number of CUHK, – 91 refers to the subnet number of CSE, – 60 refers to the host number of “orchid”. 25 Subnet Mask • 252 254 = 1111 1100 1111 1110 26 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) • A Protocol for assigning dynamic IP address to devices on a network. • It is built on client and server models. – Server is the machine running DHCPD. – Client can be any network devices. Advantage? Eliminates manual configuration of network parameters and utilizes the use of IP address 27 IP Routing • The process of transmitting a data packet from the source to the destination via a series of intermediate stations is called “Routing”. • IP routing works as follow: – Each data packet is labeled with IP address of the destination host 137.189.90.184 1500 bytes Data here 28 IP Packet • Includes Header, payload, data 29 Packets Are Not The Same Size • Packets may be any size up to the maximum. – Can be as small as a single keystroke – Can be larger, depending on application 30 Protocol and Addressing TCP/IP model 31 Protocol and Addressing • Internet has a large collections of protocols organized in a layering model. – Application: enables the user, whether human or software, to access the network. – Transport: responsible for source-to-destination (end-toend) data transfer. – Network: responsible for routing packets from source-todest across multiple networks. – Data link: responsible for data transfer between neighboring network elements. – Physical: coordinates the functions required to transmit a bit stream over a physical medium. 32 Protocol and Addressing Lower layer adds header to the data from upper layer. Header includes addressing and other fields. L5 data L5 data 33 Protocol Stack - Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model 34 Transmission Control Protocol - TCP • Basic functions – Decompose a lengthy data into multiple packets for transmission – Error detection, ensure validity – Packet loss? • No problem, packet retransmission 35 Packet Retransmission • A packet may be lost during the transmission across the Internet (host down, link failure, … ) • When the destination host has been waiting for a particular packet for a certain time (timeout), it will request the source host to retransmit the packet. • There is no need to retransmit all data packets. Instead, only the missing packet, which is identified by the sequence number, needs to be retransmitted. 36 Error detection - Checksums • Transmission errors occur even if a data packet is received by the destination successfully. • How to ensure the data is correctly received? – A method to detect possible transmission errors. – At the destination, checksum is recalculated based on the received data. – The attached checksum and the newly calculated checksum are compared. Mismatch means there is transmission errors occurred. 37 IPv6 (IP version 6) • Major changes: – More addresses • IP address size from 32 bits to 128 bits – Simplified IP headers • Reduction of header fields in IP packet – Added security features 38 Why DNS? • What is DNS? – Domain Name System • IP address is difficult to remember. – 137.189.92.1 is which machine? • Names are given to each computer on the Internet for the convenience of human users. • Besides IP addresses, all internet applications allow users to use computer names. 39 Computer names on the NET • How does it look like? – DNS administrators is responsible to name computers/group in their own subnet. – Each level of responsibility is called a domain. • Domains are separated by “dots” – cse.cuhk.edu.hk – www.intel.com 40 Domain name and Host name • Each domain can create or change whatever belongs to it. – CUHK can create any new domain, cse – CSE can buy a new computer and name it as – robin, orchid, any other name. • Two computers may have the same name if they are in different domains. – orchid.cse.cuhk.edu.hk – orchid.ie.cuhk.edu.hk 41 Domain Name System (DNS) • Each node in the tree has – a label - a string with a maximum of 63 characters. – a domain name - a sequence of labels separated by dots. 42 How does DNS work? • DNS server = DNS service? 43 IP vs Domain Name 44 Most Common hostname Figure 18.1 The fifty most common names assigned to computers on the Internet in 2000. 45 References • Computer Networks – A. S. Tanenbaum (Prentice Hall) 46