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Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

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Chapter 3 Internet
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Page 1: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Chapter 3

Internet

Page 2: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers

Page 3: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Server

Computer Answers requests for services.

– Mail servers– Web servers– List servers (discussed in Ch. 10)– News servers (discussed in Ch. 10)

Page 4: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Network

A computer system that uses communications equipment to connect two or more computers and their resources.

Actual physical means for transporting data (packets of information)

Page 5: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Network

Uses:– Copper wires -- electrical impulses. or– Fiber-optic cables - light waves. or– Radio Waves or– Microwaves or– Infrared light -- invisible light that carries a

message through air.

Page 6: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Router

Special-purpose computer Computer that directs data packets

along the network.

Page 7: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Local Area Network (LAN)

A network designed to share data and resources among several computers, usually personal computers in a limited geographical area, such as an office or a building. (compare to WAN)

Page 8: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Wide Area Network (WAN)

A network of geographically distant computers and terminals. (compare to LAN)

Page 9: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Host

The central computer in a network, to which other computers, and perhaps terminals, are attached.

A personal computer with file-transfer software permits a user to download data files from the host or upload data files to the host.

Page 10: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Downloading a file means to retrieve it from another computer.

Page 11: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Uploading a file means to send a file to another computer.

Page 12: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Node

A device, usually a personal computer, that is connected to a network.

Page 13: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Star network topology

Hub Computer

Page 14: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Ring network topology

Computers are connected in a circular fashion

Page 15: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Bus network topology Network is preserved if one computer fails

Page 16: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Benefits of a Network

Used as a back up for files Resources, such as printers, can be

shared Promotes an ease of communication

through e-mail, transferring files and videoconferencing

Page 17: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Benefits of a Network (continued) It costs less to use several small

computers connected to a network than to use a large computer.

And several small computers connected to a network can offer more computing power than just using a single large computer.

Page 18: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Packet switching

Transmitted data is divided into small packets of information.

Each packet has the same destination but does not necessarily take the same path.

Page 19: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Advantages of packets

Packets can be rerouted to a less congested area of the network if a particular area is congested.

If the network experiences a failure, packets can be rerouted.

If a packet is corrupted, only the corrupted packet needs to be resent.

Page 20: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

What other information is contained in a packet? Info about the computer that sent it Info about the computer to which it is

being sent A sequence number

Page 21: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

TCP / IP

Software managing the transmission of the individual packets.

TCP / IP - Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol

Consists of many (approx. 100) different protocols

Communication between networks is based on the TCP/IP suite.

Page 22: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

TCP

Places the data into packets and reassembles the packets.

Page 23: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

IP

Handles the addressing and sees to it that packets are routed across multiple computers.

Page 24: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Connecting to the Internet User connects to the ISP (Internet Service

Provider) using either a modem or an ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) – Replaces a modem with a special adaptor.

ISP connects to the NSP (Network Service Provider) networks through leased lines through the local phone company.

TCP/IP then divides the message into packets and sends them over the lines.

Page 25: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Connecting to the Internet (continued) The router directs the packets to their

destination. The packets are reassembled at their

destination-computer which then responds to any request.

A message is sent from the destination computer to the sending computer in order to request that any missing or corrupt packets be resent.

Page 26: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Internet

Network of networks Used to:

– View web pages (WWW)– Download files (ftp)

• Files located on a remote computer can be downloaded

– Communicate through e-mail

Page 27: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Internet (another definition)

Global information system linked together by a unique address space (DNS).

Page 28: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Domain Name System (DNS)

Used to assign names to host computers.

Page 29: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Domain Name

Symbolic name used to identify each computer on the Internet.

Page 30: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

IP Address

Numeric name used to identify each computer on the Internet.

Consists of 32 bits (4 bytes)

Page 31: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Largest 8 bit number is 255. Smallest 8 bit number is 0

11111111 = 28 - 1 = 255

00000000 = 0

Page 32: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

IP Address (continued)

Consists of a network component and a host component.

Ex. 102.150.8.68 01100110 = 102 10010110 = 150 00001000 = 8 01000100 = 68

Page 33: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Review URL entered

– http://publications.UNL.edu/faculty/index.htm

Browser queries the DNS for the IP Address– Domain Name System

IP address returned– 123.66.102.77

Page 34: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

TCP connection is established with 123.66.102.77

Browser then asks for the “what” part of the URL– index.htm

The server, publications.UNL.edu, sends back the file index.htm.

Page 35: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

TCP connection is then closed Browser renders the text portion of the

HTML code contained in index.htm Steps are repeated in order to retrieve

any in-line images within index.htm.– In-line image -- Image within a document.

Page 36: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Who can publish on the web?

Anyone

Page 37: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Some material is monitored for accuracy. Electronic Journals Commercial presentations Reputable authors

Page 38: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Be a critical judge

Who wrote it? Is the writing quality high? Is the document up to date? Are there obvious errors?

Page 39: Chapter 3 Internet. Physical Components of the Internet Servers Networks Routers.

Note: Pg. 126 Communication Mechanisms

LOL - laughing out loud

TY - thank you

RTFM - Read The Fine Manual• Not all substitute the word “fine” for the letter

“F”.


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