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IS605: Hands-On Networking Laboratory Fall 2005 Part I. Network Properties of your Desktop Computer 1. Click on “Start” 2. Choose “Control Panel” 3. Click on “Network and Internet Connections” 4. Click on “Network Connections” 5. Double Click on “Local Area Connection” 6. Click on Support Tab a. IP addresses Q1. What is the IP address assigned to your workstation? ______________ Q2. What is the IP address of your “Default Gateway”? _____________ Q3. Your Address Type has been assigned by DHCP. What does that mean? 7. Click on the “Details” Button b. DNS: Domain name service Q4. What is (are) the IP address(es) of your DNS Server(s) ? _____________ _____________ Q5. What is the purpose of the DNS server c. Physical addresses Q4. What is the physical address of your workstation? ______________ The physical address is needed for actual physical transmission of data within your LAN (Local Area Network). IP addresses always have to be “translated” into actual physical addresses before the transmission can take place. Your desktop needs to know not only the IP address of its default gateway but also the physical address of that gateway. 2 8. Open the so called command mode window. Click on start and then run 9. Type “cmd” in the window, the command mode window with black background should open 10. Type: arp –a Q5. What is the physical address of the default gateway? ______________ 11. Close the command mode window. 12. Close the “Network Connection Details Window” if it is still open. 13. Click on the “General” Tab of the Local Area Connection Status window. 3 14. Click on the “Properties” Button. 15. Scroll down the list of items all the way to the last item “Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). 16. Double Click on that item This window allows for manual allocation of IP addresses, as well as manual specification of Default Gateways and DNS servers. Do not attempt to do any of that. 17. Click the ”Cancel” button to exit that window. 18. Click the ”Cancel” button to exit the Local Connection Properties window. 19. Close all the remaining windows. 4 Part II. Exploring the routes to various Internet hosts 1. Click on “Start” 2. Click on “Programs” 3. Choose Program called “VisualRoute 2005” We will use this application to trace the flow of packets from their source to their destination. This application will show how many hops (intermediate routers/networks) the packet requires to reach the destination host, as well as the average time required for the transmission. First we will trace the route to the following destination (web server) www.qwest.com 4. Type the destination address in the address window as shown: 5 You should see several IP addresses. These are the hops being taken to reach the final address. Please note that you are using a special utility to learn the IP addresses of the routers through which your packets are traveling. To provide an analogy, if you were to send a letter from your home to your friend’s house, hops are akin to each post office through which your letter passes writing its post office identification number on a letter routing slip. 5. Wait until the entire report is done and answer the following questions Q1. How many routers in this path are on Clarkson University campus? ________________ Q2. How many hops, in total, did you see? ______ Q3. How many different network providers are in the path from your machine to the final destination? ______ Q4. What was the average response time for this route? _______ 6. Using the edit -> snap as text option save the report as a text file in notepad 6 7. Repeat this trace two more times and compare the report numbers Q5. Was the average response time the same for this route in all three reports? _______ If not, how big was the variation? Q6. Did the packets follow the same route in all three traces? ______ Using the VisualTrace application, trace the route form the your machine to the following three locations (Do three traces for each location): www.derspiegel.de ( a German weekly magazine) www.varig.com.br (a Brazilian airline) choose your own ___________________________________ Q7. How many routers in these paths are on Clarkson University campus? ________________ Q8. How many hops, in total, did you see? www.derspiegel.de: ______ www.varig.com.br :_______ Your Own: _______ Q10. What was the average response time for this route? www.derspiegel.de: ______ www.varig.com.br :_______ 7 Your Own: _______ Q11. Was the average response time the same for this route in all three reports? _______ If not, how big was the variation? www.derspiegel.de: ______ www.varig.com.br :_______ Your Own: _______ Q12. Did the packets follow the same route in all three traces? www.derspiegel.de: ______ www.varig.com.br :_______ Your Own: _______ 8