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Data Comm. & Networks Instructor: Ibrahim Tariq Lecture 3
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2.2 Figure 2.2 Seven layers of the OSI model
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3 Physical layer Transporting bits from one end node to the next - type of the transmission media (twisted-pair, coax, optical fiber, air) - bit representation (voltage levels of logical values) - data rate (speed) - synchronization of bits (time synchronization) physical connection
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4 The physical layer is responsible for movements of individual bits from one hop (node) to the next. Note
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5 Data Link layer Transporting frames from one end node to the next one logical connection - framing - physical addressing - flow control - error control - access control
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6 Data Link layer - hop-to-hop delivery-
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7 The data link layer is responsible for moving frames from one hop (node) to the next. Note
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8 Network layer End-to-End packet delivery From the original source to a destination Needed when 2 devices are attached to different networks What is the network definition here? Main duties: 1. Logical addressing 2. Routing 3. Congestion control and QoS Not a message
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2.9 Figure 2.8 Network layer
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10 Source to destination delivery Data Link Network layer
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11 Network layer - example - Network layer addresses Data Link layer addresses
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12 The network layer is responsible for the delivery of individual packets from the source host to the destination host. Note
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13 Transport layer Process-to-Process delivery of the entire message – From the original source to a destination Needed when several processes (running programs) active at the same time Main tasks: – Port addressing – Segmentation and reassembly – Congestion control – Flow control – Error control
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2.14 Figure 2.10 Transport layer
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2.15 Figure 2.11 Reliable process-to-process delivery of a message
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16 The transport layer is responsible for the delivery of a message from one process to another. Note
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2.17 Figure 2.12 Session layer
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18 The session layer is responsible for dialog control and synchronization. Note
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2.19 Figure 2.13 Presentation layer
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20 The presentation layer is responsible for translation, compression, and encryption. Note
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2.21 Figure 2.14 Application layer
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22 Application layer Enables user to access the network Provides services to a user – E-mail – Remote file access and transfer (Telnet, FTP) – Access to WWW (HTTP)
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23 The application layer is responsible for providing services to the user. Note
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24 OSI Reference Model A convenient aid for remembering the OSI layer names is to use the first letter of each word in the phrase: All People Seem To Need Data Processing
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2.25 Figure 2.15 Summary of layers
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