Chapter 3 CISCO Semester I Unit 3 - Media Karl WickSUNY Ulster.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Network Hardware and Physical Media
Advertisements

Introduction to Network
N ETWORKING MEDIA. COMMON NETWORK CABLES The connection between the source and destination may either be direct or indirect, and may span multiple media.
Connecting to a computer Network Network interface Card (NIC) Connecting Devices Network Cables Wireless Networks Network Topology Network Operating System.
DCN286 INTRODUCTION TO DATA COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY Network Media, Connectors and Standards.
CCNA 1 v3.1 Module 3 Review. 2 Which combinations of charges will be repelled by electric force? positive and positive negative and negative.
Network+ Guide to Networks, Fourth Edition Chapter 3 Transmission Basics and Networking Media.
Module 3 Networking Media.
1 Version 3.0 Module 3 Networking Media. 2 Version 3.0 Cable Specifications Cables have different specifications and expectations pertaining to performance:
WXES2106 Network Technology Semester /2005 Chapter 2 Networking Media CCNA1: Module 3, 4 and 5.
Computer Networks & Security
Router. Switch Repeater Cable is the medium through which information usually moves from one network device to another. It used to connect one network.
Many Roads To Home. LAN Roads UTP STP Coaxial Fiber Optics.
1 12-Aug-15 OSI Physical layer CCNA Exploration Semester 1 Chapter 8.
Media Chapter 2. Two types of Cables Baseband Broadband.
Physical Layer Data Encoding Transmission media Signals Bits to signal transformation  Timing (bit rate)  Synchronization.
CCNA Semester I Unit 5 – Cabling LANs and WANS Karl WickSUNY Ulster.
Electronics and Signals Chapter 4. Parts of an Atom nucleus - the center part of the atom, formed by neutrons and protons nucleus - the center part of.
Cisco 1 - Networking Basics Perrine. J Page 19/3/2015 Chapter 3 Which of the following correctly describes the type of signal that the network media carries?
Semester 1 Module 5 Cabling LANs and WANs. Ethernet Standards.
Atoms & Electrons All matter is composed of atoms. The Periodic Table of Elements lists all known types of atoms and their properties. The atom is comprised.
1 Electronics & Signals Honolulu Community College Cisco Academy Training Center Semester 1 Version
Copper Media Kyle, Tyler, James, Ben. Atoms and Electrons Electrons-particles with a negative charge the orbit the nucleus Protons-particles with a positive.
1 © 2004, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CCNA 1 v3.1 Module 3 Networking Media.
Transmission Media The physical pathways that connect computers and devices on a network.
Networking Fundamentals Copper Core Cable as Network Media.
Cisco 1 - Networking Basics Perrine. J Page 110/16/2015 Chapter 4 Which of the following best describes a digital signal? 1.A sine wave of normal shape.
Lecture 8 Cable Certification & Testing:. Cable Distribution Cable Distribution Equipment UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) UTP Cable Termination Tools UTP.
Copper Media Describe the specifications and performances of different types of cable. Describe coaxial cable and its advantages and disadvantages over.
Five components of data communication
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public ITE PC v4.0 Chapter 1 1 OSI Data Link Layer Network Fundamentals – Chapter 7.
Copyright CCNA 1 Chapter 4, Part 2 Cabling LANs and WANs By Your Name.
The switch is the backbone of nearly every network in use. It generally comprises of 4 to 64 ports. Each port on a switch operates in it’s own collision.
CCNA1: Network Basics v3.0 CISCO NETWORKING ACADEMY PROGRAM CCNA1: Networking Media Copper and Fiber Based Media, Wireless Networking.
Topology, refers to the physical and logical diagrams which summarize network connections and information flow.
Computer Networking Dinesh Kumar Ram PGT Comp.Sc. KV NAD Aluva.
 Cables  Network Interface Card (NIC)  Repeaters  Hubs  Switches  Routers  Gateways  Bridges.
Transmission Media. Characteristics to consider for Media Selection Throughput Cost Installation Maintenance Obsolescence vs bleeding edge Support Life.
CCNA1 v3 Module 3 v3 CCNA 1 Module 3 JEOPARDY S Dow.
Ethernet Advanced Chapter 5. Release 16/7/2009 Chapter Objectives Explain 10Base-T network Explain 10Base-FL Explain the rule Identify different.
Network Media. Copper, Optical, Fibre (Physical Layer Technologies) Introduction to Computer Networking.
TOPIC 1.2 INTRODUCTION TO NETWORKING. OBJECTIVES By the end of the topic, students should be able to: a) List the elements of data communication systems.
LECTURE#6 - CABLES Asma AlOsaimi. Copper Coaxial Cable - Thick or Thin Unshielded Twisted Pair - CAT 3,4,5,5e&6 Optical Fiber Multimode Singlemode Wireless.
NETWORKING MEDIA b Shielded twisted-pair - 2 pair, 150 ohm b unshielded-twisted pair - 4 pair, 100 ohm b fiber optic cable - 2 fibers b coaxial cable -
+ Lecture1 Transmission Media Asma Alosaimi 1. + Topics: Review Transmission media types Copper Media Fiber Optical Media Wireless Media 2.
Lecture 2 unit 1.
LOGO Physical Layer and Cabling Jaringan Komputer_D3 TT1.
Chapter 4: Network Access
Instructor Materials Chapter 4: Network Access
CCNA 1 pgb JEOPARDY.
Lecture #01 Transmission Media
Media, Connections, and Collisions
Lecture #01 Transmission Media
Level 2 Diploma Unit 10 Setting up an IT Network
Network Media Types COMPUTER NETWORKS 4TH Edition Chapter3
Computer Networks and Internet
Basic Electricity/Electronics
Chapter 4: Network Access
CT1403 Lecture#1:Transmission Media
Computer Networks and Internet
Conducted and Wireless Media (Part I)
Instructor: Mr. Malik Zaib
CHAPTER 3 Physical Layer.
CCNA 1 v3 JEOPARDY Module 3 CCNA1 v3 Module 3 S Dow.
Lecture #01 Transmission Media
LECTURE #01 TRANSMISSION MEDIA
Ethernet LAN 1 1.
Network Hardware.
Lecture #01 Transmission Media
CCNA 1 v3 JEOPARDY Module 3 CCNA1 v3 Module 3 K. Martin.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 3 CISCO Semester I Unit 3 - Media Karl WickSUNY Ulster

MEDIA Media refers to the physical layer Media includes; –NICs –Cabling –Connectors –Layer 1, 2, and 3 devices –Media is Hardware

MEDIA For Cisco’s purposes – Media is the hardware that connects the devices in a network. Copper – inexpensive, easy to work with Fiber – longer distance, high bandwidth Wireless – portability of nodes

Cat 5 Cables Category 5 is the standard type of wire for Ethernet cables. Category 5 cable contains four pairs of wire. Each pair is twisted around itself and the rate of twist varies from pair to pair. 10 base T and 100 base T ethernet use two pairs. Gigabit ethernet uses all 4 pairs.

REVIEW

Atomic Structure Free Electrons are the key to electricity

Conductor Any material that allows easy passage of electrical current. Most metals are good conductors Any material with free electrons or Ions

Conductor Any material that allows easy passage of electrical current. Most metals are good conductors Any material with free electrons or Ions –Gold –Silver –Copper –Nickel –Mercury –Tin –Lead –Iron - A fair conductor –Most Water (Has ions) –Humans

Insulator Any material that does not allow easy passage of electrical current

Insulator Any material that does not allow easy passage of electrical current –Wood –Plastic –Teflon –Cotton –Dry air –PURE Water (Distilled and de-ionized)

Current Def: The flow of electrons through a material. Measured in Amperes. –6.02 x coulombs per second (This is a somewhat simplified definition)

Voltage A force created by the separation of positive and negative electrical charges. Also called EMF or Electromotive Force. Voltage causes current to flow.

Resistance A material’s reluctance to pass current A conductor has very little resistance An insulator has very high resistance A semi-conductor is in between and resistance may be variable

Ohm’s Law Ohm said that current flow is proportional to the amount of voltage applied and inversely proportional to the amount of resistance in the circuit I = V/R, or as the rule reads: V = I*R, It is sometimes written as E = I*R

Complete Circuit

Static Electricity Loose Electrons at rest No conducting path to let them move Very high voltage, no current until discharge, then low current. Very damaging to electronic equipment.

Modes of Transmission Simplex Half-Duplex Full Duplex

Copper Media UTP, STP, Coaxial, etc.

10 base T One pair simplex 100 base T Two pairs duplex 1000 base T Four pairs duplex Fiber Two fibers duplex

RJ-45 The RJ-45 connector is the standard connector for UTP cables (the most commonly used cables for ethernet) The RJ-45 standard specifies 8 pins and a certain minimum quality of connector There are also RJ-45 jacks. These are used in patch panels and devices (examples?)

EIA568A and EIA568B

Bad and Good Connections

Cable Types - Straight All 8 pins connect to the same pins on each end of the cable Used for most Ethernet connections EIA 568A or 568B, same on both ends

Crossover A special cable cable used to connect two devices of the same type. –Workstation to workstation –Sometimes between other devices EIA 568A on one end, EIA 568B on other Transmit and receive pairs are swapped

Rollover Used to connect a workstation serial port to the console port on a router or programmable switch Also called a console cable All pins swap end to end (1-8, 2-7, etc)

Types of Electrical Signals DC, AC, Digital

DC Electricity where electrons flow in only one direction. A battery generates DC electricity

AC Electricity where electrons flow in both directions Electricity where polarity reverses periodically

Digital Signal

Impedance A Property similar to resistance but more complex. Impedance opposes the flow of AC current Impedance opposes the flow of Digital Signals

Data Transmission Concerns

Collisions A collision occurs when two devices try to send data over shared media at the same time. Collisions destroy data one bit at a time.

Collisions A collision occurs when two devices try to send data over shared media at the same time. Collisions destroy data one bit at a time.

Collision Domain Collision Domain means “the place where collisions may take place AND all of the devices that can send data to that place”.

Hubs and Repeaters extend Collision Domains

Bridges, Switches and Routers segment Collision Domains

Other Concerns Noise Pickup –Twisted pair minimizes pickup of external noise due to canceling effect. Attenuation Crosstalk

Optical Media Single Mode or Multi Mode

Optical Terms Reflection Angle of incidence = angle of reflection Refraction –Bending of ray as light crosses a boundary. Index of Refraction –Speed in material / Speed in a vacuum Micron –a metric unit of length equal to one millionth of a meter

Single Mode Fiber Optic Transmission Small Core = Low Dispersion. Long Distance – Up to 10,000 feet. Laser light source. Single Duplex Conversation at a time (all fiber uses TWO fibers per connection). Fastest data flow

Multi Mode Fiber Transmission Large Core = more dispersion Medium long distance – 2km 0r 6,500 feet. Can use LED’s as a light source. – Cheaper. Slower data flow than single mode fiber.

Bending of fiber should be minimized A straight single mode fiber conducts light very well. Any light at less than the critical angle will remain in the fiber. Bends change the critical angle. More chance of loss. With severe bends all of the light is lost.

Signal Loss Signal loss is usually greatest at terminations. –Terminations must be perfectly square. –Terminations must be perfectly smooth. –Terminations must be perfectly clean. –Terminations must touch perfectly (no gaps) Otherwise signal loss will occur.

Wireless Networks , b, a, g

Standards, stamdards The oldest. Up to2Mbps b - Up to 11Mbps, typically 5+Mbps a - Up to 54 Mbps (or proprietary X2), but in practice closer to 25Mbps g – Compatible with both b and a All have low throughputs due to overhead.

Non Standard – up to 108 Mbps?

Access Point Used to cover a specific area and provide connectivity to a wired LAN or to the WAN. Generally cover a 300 to 500 foot diameter but this is variable by building materials. “Cells” with coverage areas overlapping by 20-30% are often used.

Wireless Frames Differ from Ethernet –Control (RTS, CTS, ACK) –Access Probe Request / Response by Node Association Request / Response by Node Beacons by the Access Point Authentication –Data – only these are similar to May however be longer (2346 bytes vs 1518).

Adaptive Rate Selection (ARS) As signal strength becomes weaker, or interference increases, the Access Point may invoke ARS to give better data integrity. Basically speed cuts in half. Longer bit lengths = reliability.

Connecting to the Network Unauthenticated and unassociated –The node is disconnected from the network and not associated to an access point. Authenticated and unassociated –The node has been authenticated on the network but has not yet associated with the access point. Authenticated and associated –The node is connected to the network and able to transmit and receive data through the access point.

Security? What Security? Cisco – “Where wireless networks exist there is little security.” WLANs often extend outside the perimeter of the home or office in which they are installed and without security intruders may infiltrate the network with little effort. A number of new security solutions and protocols, such as Virtual Private Networking (VPN) and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) are emerging.

Security? What Security? With EAP, the access point does not provide authentication to the client, but passes the duties to a more sophisticated device, possibly a dedicated server, designed for that purpose. Using an integrated server, VPN technology creates a tunnel on top of an existing protocol such as IP. This is a Layer 3 connection as opposed to the Layer 2 connection between the AP and the sending node.

Modulation Adding data to an AC signal. Module does an OK job but shirks some issues: See also a good flash activity. Signal strength is inversely proportional to distance squared. Phase modulation dynamically alters the phase or starting point of each cycle of the carrier wave.

Common Modulation Types

End