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Chapter 14 Managerial issues in networking
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Overview Network design Network management – Hardware – Software Technology standards Role of government and legal process 2
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Introduction Cost containment and formal design not critical for typical home network Large networks need formal methods for design and management – To contain costs while meeting user needs – Standard designs and practices have been developed in the industry based on experience 3
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Network design Formal design process is useful Successful design ensures that Basic systems analysis and design principles can be adapted to network design 4
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Requirements analysis Fortunately modern network technologies meet most typical user needs Some pockets of intense use may exist 5
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Logical network design Based on user input and prior experience, requirements analysis identifies network needs Logical network design represents network requirements in a form that Drawing is a very good idea 6
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Logical network design Should show for every area of the network – Total number of general-purpose desktops – Shared devices such as printers – Devices with special network needs, e.g servers – Subnets – Network services such as DNS, DHCP – Network security and management utilities such as firewalls 7
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Logical network design example Consider an example of a small business specializing in video production – Editing group needs high bandwidth connectivity to its storage network – Other groups only need plain desktop connectivity IT Administration – Extra network ports provisioned in every subnet for future expansion 8
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Logical network design example 9
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Physical network design Logical design reviewed by IT and end users Physical network design indicates the technologies that will be used to implement the logical design 10
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Physical network design example 11
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Implementation Networks in young organizations often use best-of-breed As organizations mature, designs are often implemented using a common set of technologies Design in example could also have used 1 gbps Ethernet ports throughout the company 12
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Campus network Computer networks typically fall into three categories – Building networks Smallest network unit Design standardized from experience – Campus networks Span multiple buildings in close vicinity Typical state university – Enterprise networks Network scattered across campuses Uses WAN technologies 13
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Campus network example 14
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Campus networks Typically have three layers – Core layer – Distribution layer – Access layer Core layer – Optimized for fast packet handling and availability – Routers only responsible for forwarding to appropriate distribution layer device 15
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Campus networks Distribution layer – Organizes network into subnets – Handles routing – Implements administrative policies using firewall etc – Can offer network services such as DNS, DHCP – Handles Internet connection Access layer – Provides network ports to end users – Can offer network services such as DNS, DHCP – Typically uses building network architecture 16
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Enterprise networks Successful organizations add offices in other cities, states and countries Campuses need to be connected to each other using WAN technologies Some campuses could be small 17
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Enterprise networks 18
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Network maintenance Networks need ongoing maintenance for performance – activities performed to keep networks in a serviceable condition or to restore them to serviceability – Includes activities such as inspection, testing, and servicing Two categories of assets – Hardware – Software 19
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Hardware maintenance Typical network may have hundreds of devices Manual monitoring is very expensive Two components – Management station – Network agents 20
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Network management with SNMP 21
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Hardware maintenance Network agents store information about their device in a management information base (MIB) – MIB only contains information necessary for fault management or configuration management Management station uses SNMP protocol to set or retrieve values from the MIB 22
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Software maintenance One of the biggest concerns in software maintenance is patching Tools have been developed to automatically scan all networked software on every device on the network – Confirm application of patches and other utilities – Nessus is a popular free tool 23
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Nessus scan 24
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Standards Communication on the Internet almost always works Compare smooth connectivity on the Internet to other environments 25
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Standards Most technologies used on the Internet follow standards – documents, established by consensus and approved by a recognized body that help achieve high degree of order – Products that comply with standards can easily inter-operate with other devices compliant with the same standard TCP/ IP, Ethernet are standards 26
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Standards creation Typically follows well-established procedure – Expert organization takes lead Develops requirements for the new standard – Meet communication needs that can be economically satisfied with available technology – Technology solutions are proposed by interested organizations – Proposed solutions are evaluated – Solution with overwhelming majority becomes standard E.g. development of IEEE 802.11n standard 27
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Government involvement Technological development is mostly led by private sector However, government has played a key role in the development of networking technologies – Packetization by Department of Defense – Early Internet by National Science Foundation – Web browser by National Science Foundation – Allocation of wireless spectrum by the FCC 28
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Legal process Development of the phone network was influenced by judicial and legislative actions – Modified final judgment (1982) introduced competition in long distance phone service Judicial action – Telecommunications act of 1996 introduced competition in local phone service Legislative action Net neutrality debate is ongoing 29
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Summary Formal network design process helps networks meet end user requirements most effectively Automated network maintenance is important to keep large networks operational Standards enable inter-operability of communication equipment Government and legal process have played critical roles in helping the evolution of communication technologies
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Case study Telework and telecommuting – Networks are changing how we work – Over 20% of the US workforce telecommutes Networks bring resources to places where they would otherwise be unavailable – Haiti earthquake, Jan 12, 2010 – Ongoing medical care Local specialists access the expertise of physicians in Miami and other places
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Hands-on exercise OPNET LAN project
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Network design Wanted ad
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