1.2 Explain the characteristics of network topologies and network types. Flashcards

1
Q

Network Topologies

A
  • Useful in planning a new network
    – Physical layout of a building or campus
  • Assists in understanding signal flow
    – Troubleshooting problems
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2
Q

Star

A
  • Hub and spoke
  • Used in most large and small networks
  • All devices are connected to a central device
  • Switched Ethernet networks
    The switch is in the middle
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3
Q

Ring

A
  • Used in many popular topologies
    – Token Ring is no longer with us
  • Still used in many Metro Area Networks (MANs) and
    Wide Area Networks (WANs)
    – Dual-rings
    – Built-in fault tolerance

!!! for the test they always mean FDDI ring. So think Redundancy. Ring = Redundant !!!

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4
Q

Bus

A
  • Early local area networks
    – Coaxial cable was the bus
  • Simple, but prone to errors
    – One break in the link disabled the entire network
  • Controller Area Network
    – CAN bus
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5
Q

Mesh

A
  • Multiple links to the same place
    – Fully connected
    – Partially connected
  • Redundancy, fault-tolerance, load balancing
  • Used in wide area networks (WANs)
    – Fully meshed and partially meshed
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6
Q

Hybrid

A
  • A combination of one or more physical topologies
    – Most networks are a hybrid
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7
Q

Wireless topologies

A

Infrastructure
– All devices communicate through
an access point
– The most common wireless
communication mode
* Ad hoc networking
– No preexisting infrastructure
– Devices communication amongst themselves
* Mesh
– Ad hoc devices work together
to form a mesh “cloud”
– Self form and self heal

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8
Q

Peer-to-peer

A
  • All devices are both clients and servers
    – Everyone talks to everyone
  • Advantages
    – Easy to deploy, Low cost
  • Disadvantages
    – Difficult to administer
    – Difficult to secure
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9
Q

Client-server

A
  • Central server
    – Clients talk to the server
  • No client-to-client communication
  • Advantages
    – Performance, administration
  • Disadvantages
    – Cost, complexity
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10
Q

LAN - Local Area Network

A
  • A building or group of buildings
    – High-speed connectivity
  • Ethernet and 802.11 wireless
    – Any slower and it isn’t “local”
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11
Q

MAN - Metropolitan Area Network

A
  • A network in your city
    – Larger than a LAN, often smaller than a WAN
  • Common to see government ownership
    – They “own” the right-of-way
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12
Q

WAN - Wide Area Network

A
  • Generally connects LANs across a distance
    – And generally much slower than the LAN
  • Many different WAN technologies
    – Point-to-point serial, MPLS, etc.
    – Terrestrial and non-terrestrial
    Cus
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13
Q

WLAN - Wireless LAN

A
  • 802.11 technologies
  • Mobility within a building or geographic area
  • Expand coverage with additional access points
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14
Q

PAN - Personal Area Network

A
  • Your own private network
    – Bluetooth, IR, NFC
  • Automobile
    – Audio output
    – Integrate with phone
  • Mobile phone
    – Wireless headset
  • Health
    – Workout telemetry, daily reports
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15
Q

CAN - Campus Area Network

A
  • Corporate Area Network
  • Limited geographical area
    – A group of buildings
  • LAN technologies
    – Fiber connected, high speed Ethernet
  • Your fiber in the ground
    – No third-party provider
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16
Q

NAS vs. SAN

A
  • Network Attached Storage (NAS)
    – Connect to a shared storage device
    across the network
    – File-level access
  • Storage Area Network (SAN)
    – Looks and feels like a local storage device
    – Block-level access
    – Very efficient reading and writing
  • Requires a lot of bandwidth
    – May use an isolated network and
    high-speed network
17
Q

MPLS

A
  • Learning from ATM and Frame Relay
  • Packets through the WAN have a label
    – Routing decisions are easy
  • Any transport medium, any protocol inside
    – IP packets, ATM cells, Ethernet frames
    – OSI layer 2.5 (!)
  • Increasingly common WAN technology
    – Ready-to-network
18
Q

MPLS pushing and popping

A
  • Labels are “pushed” onto packets as they enter the MPLS cloud
  • Labels are “popped” off on the way out
19
Q

mGRE

A
  • Multipoint Generic Router Encapsulation
    – Used extensively for Dynamic Multipoint VPN (DMVPN)
    – Common on Cisco routers
  • Your VPN builds itself
    – Remote sites communicate to each other
  • Tunnels are built dynamically, on-demand
    A dynamic mesh
20
Q

SD-WAN

A
  • Software Defined Networking in a Wide Area Network
    – A WAN built for the cloud
  • The data center used to be in one place
    – The cloud has changed everything
  • Cloud-based applications communicate directly to the cloud
    – No need to hop through a central point
21
Q

Demarcation point

A
  • The point where you connect with the outside world
    – WAN provider
    – Internet service provider
    – The demarc
  • Used everywhere
    – Even at home
  • Central location in a building
    – Usually a network interface device
    – Can be as simple as an RJ-45 connection
  • You connect your CPE
    – Customer premises equipment or “customer prem”
22
Q

Smartjack

A
  • Network interface unit (NIU)
    – The device that determines the demarc
    – Network Interface Device,
    Telephone Network Interface
  • Smartjack
    – More than just a simple interface
    – Can be a circuit card in a chassis
  • Built-in diagnostics
    – Loopback tests
  • Alarm indicators
    – Configuration, status
23
Q

Virtual networks

A
  • Server farm with 100 individual computers
    – It’s a big farm
  • All servers are connected with enterprise
    switches and routers
    – With redundancy
  • Migrate 100 physical servers to one physical server
    – With 100 virtual servers inside
  • What happens to the network?
24
Q

Network function virtualization (NFV)

A
  • Replace physical network devices with virtual versions
    – Manage from the hypervisor
  • Same functionality as a physical device
    – Routing, switching, load balancing, firewalls, etc.
  • Quickly and easily deploy network functions
    – Click and deploy from the hypervisor
  • Many different deployment options
    – Virtual machine, container,
    fault tolerance, etc.
25
Q

The hypervisor

A
  • Virtual Machine Manager
    – Manages the virtual platform and guest
    operating systems
  • Hardware management
    – CPU, networking, security
  • Single console control
    – One pane of glass
26
Q

vSwitch

A
  • Virtual switch
    – Move the physical switch into the virtual environment
  • Functionality is similar to a physical switch
    – Forwarding options, link aggregation,
    port mirroring, NetFlow
  • Deploy from the hypervisor
    – Automate with orchestration
27
Q

Virtual Network Interface Card (vNIC)

A
  • A virtual machine needs a network interface
    – A vNIC
  • Configured and connected through the hypervisor
    – Enable additional features
    – VLAN, aggregation, multiple interfaces
28
Q

Provider Links: Satellite networking

A
  • Communication to a satellite
    – Non-terrestrial communication
  • High cost relative to terrestrial networking
    – 50 Mbit/s down, 3 Mbit/s up are common
    – Remote sites, difficult-to-network sites
  • High latency
    – 250 ms up, 250 ms down
  • High frequencies - 2 GHz
    – Line of sight, rain fade
29
Q

Provider Links: Copper

A
  • Extensive installations
    – Relatively inexpensive,
    – Easy to install and maintain
  • Limited bandwidth availability
    – Physics limits electrical signals through copper
  • Wide area networks
    – Cable modem, DSL, T1/T3 local loop
  • Often combined with fiber
    – Copper on the local loop,
    fiber in the backbone
30
Q

Provider Links: DSL

A
  • ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line)
    – Uses telephone lines
  • Download speed is faster than the upload speed
    (asymmetric)
    – ~10,000 foot limitation from the central office (CO)
    – 200 Mbit/s downstream / 20 Mbit/s upstream
    are common
    – Faster speeds may be possible if closer to the CO
31
Q

Provider Links: Cable broadband

A
  • Broadband
    – Transmission across multiple frequencies
    – Different traffic types
  • Data on the “cable” network
    – DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface
    Specification)
  • High-speed networking
    – 50 Mbits/s through 1,000+ Mbit/s are common
  • Multiple services
    – Data, voice, video
32
Q

Provider Links: Fiber

A
  • High speed data communication
    – Frequencies of light
  • Higher installation cost than copper
    – Equipment is more costly and more difficult to repair
    – Communicate over long distances
  • Large installation in the WAN core
    – Supports very high data rates
    – SONET, wavelength division multiplexing
  • Fiber is slowly approaching the premises
    – Business and home use
33
Q

Provider Links: Metro Ethernet

A
  • Metro-E
    – Metropolitan-area network
    – A contained regional area
  • Connect your sites with Ethernet
    – A common standard
  • The provider network is optical
    – Local fiber network
    – Wavelength-division multiplexing
    – High speed, multiple wavelengths of light