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Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring FDDI Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 Layer 2 Devices Data Flow Ethernet: 10BASE-T Troubleshooting By: Stacy Olson –

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring FDDI Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 Layer 2 Devices Data Flow Ethernet: 10BASE-T Troubleshooting By: Stacy Olson –"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring FDDI Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 Layer 2 Devices Data Flow Ethernet: 10BASE-T Troubleshooting By: Stacy Olson – With help from Stephanie Hutter’s Briefings

2 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring –Developed by IBM – still used today –Two frames: Token –Start Delimiter –Access Control Byte »Priority and Reservation Fields »Token and Monitor bits –End Delimiter

3 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Data/Command Frame

4 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Token Passing –Station can only transmit if it has the token –Station passes token on if it has no data to transmit – Station can hold the token for a maximum amount of time

5 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Characteristic: –Deterministic = Taking Turns Maximum time to transmit is subject to exact calculation. Ideal for applications where predictability and dependability are paramount.

6 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Management Mechanisms –Active Monitor One station acts as centralized source of timing information for other stations Can be any station Removes continuously circulating frames

7 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Management Mechanisms –MSAU Multi Station Access Units Can see all information in a Token Ring Network Check for problems Selectively remove stations from the ring if needed

8 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Management Mechanisms –Beaconing Detects and repairs network faults Sends a beacon frame, defining a failure domain –Reporting station –Nearest Active Upstream Neighbor (NAUN) –Everything in between Initiates autoreconfiguration –Nodes within the failure domain automatically perform diagnostics –Attempt to reconfigure around the failure –MSAUs use electrical reconfiguration to accomplish this

9 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Signaling Uses Manchester Encoding –Combines data and clock into bit symbols, which are split into two halves, the polarity of the second half always being the reverse of the first half. –0 is high-to-low transition –1 is low-to-high transition

10 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Token Ring Media and Physical Topologies –Logical ring topology –Physical star topology Stations are directly connected to MSAUs Patch cables connect MSAUs Lobe cables connect MSAUs to stations

11 Overview of FDDI Fiber distributed data interface –“Fiddee” Four specifications –Media Access control –Physical Layer Protocol –Physical Layer Medium –Station Management

12 Media Access Control MAC Defines how the medium is accessed –Frame format –Token handling –Addressing –Algorithm for calculating a cyclic redundancy check and error recovery mechanisms

13 Physical Layer Protocol PHY Defines data encoding/decoding procedures –Clocking requirements –Framing –Other functions

14 Physical Layer Medium Defines the characteristics of the transmission medium –Fiber optic link –Power levels –Bit error rates –Optical components –Connectors

15 Station Management Defines the FDDI station configuration –Ring configuration –Station insertion and removal –Initialization –Fault isolation and recovery –Scheduling –Collection of statistics

16 Preamble –Prepares each station for the upcoming frame Start delimiter Frame Control –Indicates the size of the address fields –Indicates whether frame contains asynchronous or synchronous data –Other control information

17 Destination address –6 bytes –Unicast: to one address –Multicast: to several addresses –Broadcast: to all addresses Source address Data Frame Check Sequence End Delimiter Frame Status

18 FDDI Token

19 FDDI MAC Token passing strategy Early token release –New token can be released when the frame transmission has finished Deterministic Dual ring –Ensures transmission, even if one ring is damaged or disabled –Very reliable Real-time allocation of bandwidth –Defines two types of traffic Synchronous Asynchronous

20 Synchronous Traffic Consumes only a portion of the bandwidth Asynchronous traffic can consume the rest Synchronous bandwidth is allocated to those stations requiring continuous transmission, e.g. voice/video FDDI SMT specification defines a distributed bidding scheme to allocate FDDI bandwidth

21 Asynchronous Traffic Bandwidth is allocated using an eight-level priority scheme –Each station is assigned an asynchronous priority level FDDI also permits extended dialogues –Stations may temporarily use all the asynchronous bandwidth FDDI priority mechanism can lock out stations that cannot use synchronous bandwidth, and have too low an asynchronous priority

22 FDDI Signaling Uses an encoding scheme called 4B/5B –Every four bits of data are sent as a 5 bit code Signal sources are LEDs or lasers

23 FDDI Media Optical fiber is being installed at a rate of 4000 miles per day in the United States Explosive growth worldwide

24 Advantages of Optical Fiber –Security Fiber does not emit electrical signals that can be tapped –Reliability Fiber is immune to electrical interference –Speed Optical fiber has much higher throughput potential than copper cable

25 Types of Optical Fiber Modes are bundles of light rays entering the fiber at particular angles Single-mode –Also known as mono-mode –Only one mode propagates through fiber –Higher bandwidth than multi-mode –Longer cable runs than multi-mode –Lasers generate light signals –Used for inter-building connectivity

26 Types of Optical Fiber Multi-mode –Multiple modes propagate through fiber –Different angles mean different distances to travel Transmissions arrive at different times Modal dispersion –LEDs as light source –Used for intra-building connectivity

27 FDDI Rings FDDI specifies dual rings for physical connections Traffic on each ring travels in opposite directions Rings consist of two or more point-to-point connections between adjacent stations Primary ring is for data transmission Secondary ring is for back up

28 Single-Attachment Stations –SAS –Class B –Attach to one ring (primary) –Attached through a concentrator Provides connection for multiple SASs Ensures that no one SAS can interrupt the ring

29 Dual Attachment Stations DAS Class A Attach to both rings Has two ports to connect to the dual ring –Both ports connect to both rings

30 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Shortly after the 1980 IEEE 802.3 specification, Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), Intel Corporation, and Xerox Corporation jointly developed and released an Ethernet specification. Version 2.0, that was substantially compatible with IEEE 802.3. Together, Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 currently maintain the greatest market share of any LAN protocol.

31 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Today, the term Ethernet is often used to refer to all carrier sense multiple access/collision detection (CSMA/CD) LAN’s that generally conform to Ethernet specifications, including IEEE 802.3.

32 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies

33 Ethernet performs three functions: –Transmitting and receiving data packets –decoding data packets and checking them for valid addresses before passing them to the upper layers of the OSI model –detecting errors within data packets or on the network In the CSMA/CD access method, networking devices with data to transmit over the networking media work in a listen-before- transmit mode.

34 NICs Provides ports for network connection Communicate with network via serial connection Communication with computer through parallel connection Resources required: –IRQ, I/O address, upper memory addresses

35 Selection Factors for NICs Type of network –Ethernet, Token Ring, FDDI Type of media –Twisted pair, coax, fiber Type of system bus –PCI, ISA

36 NIC Operations Layer 1 & Layer 2 device Primarily Layer 2 –Communicates with upper layers in the computer Logical Link Control (LLC) –Has MAC address burned in –Encapsulates data into frames –Provides access to the media Also Layer 1 –Creates signals and interfaces with the media –On-board transceiver

37 Bridges Connects two network segments –Can connect different layer 2 protocols Ethernet, Token Ring, FDDI Makes intelligent decisions about traffic –Reduces unnecessary traffic –Minimizes collisions –Filters traffic based on MAC address Maintains address tables Rarely implemented today –Conceptually important

38 Bridge Operations Bridging occurs at the data link layer: –Controls data flow –Handles transmission errors –Provides physical addressing –Manages access to the physical medium

39 Bridge Operations Transparent to upper layers Best used in low traffic areas –Can cause bottlenecks Must examine every packet Broadcasts –Messages sent to all devices Destination MAC address unknown Bridge will always forward Can cause Broadcast Storm –Network time outs, traffic slowdowns, unacceptable performance

40 Switching Operation Microsegmentation –Each switch port acts as a micro bridge (Layer 2 device) –Multiple traffic paths within the switch –Virtual circuits –Temporarily exist - only when needed –Each data frame has a dedicated path No collisions Increases bandwidth availability –Each host gets full bandwidth

41 Advantages of Switches Much faster than bridges –Hardware based, not software Support new uses –e.g. virtual LANs Reduce collision domains

42 Advantages of Switches Allows many users to communicate in parallel –Creates virtual circuits –Creates dedicated segments Collision free Maximizes bandwidth Cost effective –Can simply replace hubs in same cable infrastructure Minimal disruption Flexible network management –Software based configuration

43 Broadcast Domains All hosts connected to the same switch are still in the same broadcast domain A broadcast from one node will be seen by all other nodes connected through the LAN switch

44 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Two primary reasons for segmenting a LAN: –Isolate traffic between segments –Achieve more bandwidth per user by creating smaller collision domains

45 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies Bridge Drawback: –Bridges increase the latency (delay) in a network by 10-30% –A bridge is considered a store-and- forward device slowing network transmissions, thus causing delay.

46 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies It is important to note that even though 100% of the bandwidth may be available, Ethernet networks perform best when kept under 30-40% of full capacity. Bandwidth usage that exceeds the recommended limitation results in increased collisions.

47 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies The Router is a layer 3 (Network) device, but operates at layers 1-3. –Routers create the highest level of segmentation because of their ability to make exact determinations of where to send the data packet. –Because routers perform more functions than bridges, they operate with a higher rate of latency.

48 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies 7.5.5 Identify Broadcast Domains and Collision Domains

49 Chapter 7 – Layer 2 Technologies

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