networking components by scott h. bowers. hub a hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically...

9
NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers

Upload: arline-dorsey

Post on 28-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

NETWORKING COMPONENTSBy Scott H. Bowers

Page 2: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

HUB

• A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power in and multiple Ethernet in ports.

• The key difference is in the layer the device operates at, the hub will broadcast to all hosts connected meaning it does not even attempt to discern whose traffic is whose.

• Normally a hub is found closest to host devices, and can be purchased for under twenty dollars.

Page 3: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

SWITCH

• A switch operates at layer two (data link) and channels traffic based on the MAC address of a host’s connected interface.

• This device can be found at the floor, or department level depending on business size.

• An enterprise switch with 48 ports can cost anywhere from 4,000 to 12,000 dollars is often stacked with other switches as part of a scalable solution.

Page 4: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

ROUTER

• The router operates at level 3 ( network layer ) transferring packets based on IP address and can often be found most readily in a personal home network, because in an enterprise environment physical access to a router is highly secure.

• The router delineates a personal home’s “inside” LAN from the ISP’s “outside” WAN, but in a business it may only separate one functional unit’s LAN from another, though both would still be considered “inside” the company.

• A router has a dedicated interface for

connection to the WAN while reserving a number

of other ports for internal use. Personal Routers

often cost under or near 100 dollars.

Page 5: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

BRIDGE

• A network bridge is a device that allows two separate networks to intercommunicate.

• Connecting two collision domains requires a bridge of some sort, and one example of this is might be a router connecting the physical and wireless LANS configured in it.

Page 6: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

GATEWAY

• A gateway acts as a network node that is configured to communicate with other networks that may be utilizing different network protocols.

• Another name for these is protocol converters and they are often found between ISP or Companies.

• The price varies on these, but once again the trusted enterprise solutions range from 1,000 dollars to very high.

Page 7: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

FIREWALL

• A firewall is a piece of hardware that inspects, and directs traffic based upon a defined ruleset of expressly allowed content or expressly blocked content.

• This device is set up between a trusted network and some other presumed unsecure network.

• An enterprise level firewall will run

near 1,000 dollars, but can reach as

high as 40,000.

Page 8: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

WIRELESS AP

• A wireless access point operates as an extended arm of the wired network which casts out radio frequencies in order to communicate with Wireless Network Interface Cards.

• This AP can be contained in a router, or simply connected to one in order to allow wireless access to the wired LAN.

• These, like routers, often cost 100 dollars or less.

Page 9: NETWORKING COMPONENTS By Scott H. Bowers. HUB A hub can be easily mistaken for a switch, physically there are no defining characteristics, both have power

DIAGRAM OF DEVICES

Gateway

Art Studio

Motion Capture

Operations IT Studio

Switch

Router

FIRE WALL

ISP

WAP

Gateway